CXEB engine rebuild advice – oil consumption, piston & rings replacement?

bebef1987

New Member
Hi everyone,
I’m looking for some help and real-world experience from members who have dealt with CXEB 2.0 BiTDI engines, especially regarding engine rebuilds and oil consumption issues.
Vehicle details:
Engine: CXEB 2.0 BiTDI
Year: 2016
Mileage: 181,000 km
Oil consumption: ~1L / 1,000 km
Aside from the oil consumption, the engine runs well: good power, no major drivability issues, and no permanent fault codes. DPF regenerations appear normal and I’m monitoring related values regularly.
I’ve gone through many existing forum threads, but I haven’t found a case that clearly matches my situation or a universally agreed root cause — so I’m hoping to get input from people who’ve actually dealt with this hands-on.
What I’ve observed so far:
I don’t see signs of turbo-related oil issues (no excessive oil in charge pipes/intercooler, no blue smoke under boost, no abnormal turbo noise)
No visible external oil leaks
Oil consumption is steady, not sudden or rapidly worsening
After inspection and discussion, my mechanic is suggesting a piston and piston rings replacement, suspecting internal wear as the main cause.
Additionally, from time to time I get a P042000 fault code, which seems to indicate that the exhaust / aftertreatment system is struggling, likely as a consequence of the high oil consumption. The error isn’t permanent, but it does reappear occasionally.
Before committing to a rebuild, I’d really appreciate advice from those with direct experience:
Is pistons + rings replacement the correct approach in most CXEB oil consumption cases?
Has this actually resolved the issue long-term for anyone here?
Are there updated or revised piston / ring part numbers or newer design variations that should be used instead of the original ones?
Any critical machining steps, tolerances, or known pitfalls?
Anything else worth addressing while the engine is open?
I’m not looking for guesses — solid real-world experience, measurements, and rebuild outcomes would be extremely helpful.
Thanks in advance, and I appreciate any insight you can share.
 
I would suggest you get your oil tested and see what other nasties are in there. The first test I had done had a high content of iron, soot and was heavily diluted with fuel. A few months later another test showed the same but with the addition of nickel aka bearing material. Like yours it ran perfectly although it was doing a regen every 50 miles.
I opted for a brand new engine and turbos.
 
I would suggest you get your oil tested and see what other nasties are in there. The first test I had done had a high content of iron, soot and was heavily diluted with fuel. A few months later another test showed the same but with the addition of nickel aka bearing material. Like yours it ran perfectly although it was doing a regen every 50 miles.
I opted for a brand new engine and turbos.
Where did you got a brand new engine and how much did it cost?
Also did the new engine come with any upgraded parts? How can we know that if we invest in a new engine or a rebuild this issue won't happen again in 50 k km ?
 
Last edited:
Hi everyone,
I’m looking for some help and real-world experience from members who have dealt with CXEB 2.0 BiTDI engines, especially regarding engine rebuilds and oil consumption issues.
Vehicle details:
Engine: CXEB 2.0 BiTDI
Year: 2016
Mileage: 181,000 km
Oil consumption: ~1L / 1,000 km
Aside from the oil consumption, the engine runs well: good power, no major drivability issues, and no permanent fault codes. DPF regenerations appear normal and I’m monitoring related values regularly.
I’ve gone through many existing forum threads, but I haven’t found a case that clearly matches my situation or a universally agreed root cause — so I’m hoping to get input from people who’ve actually dealt with this hands-on.
What I’ve observed so far:
I don’t see signs of turbo-related oil issues (no excessive oil in charge pipes/intercooler, no blue smoke under boost, no abnormal turbo noise)
No visible external oil leaks
Oil consumption is steady, not sudden or rapidly worsening
After inspection and discussion, my mechanic is suggesting a piston and piston rings replacement, suspecting internal wear as the main cause.
Additionally, from time to time I get a P042000 fault code, which seems to indicate that the exhaust / aftertreatment system is struggling, likely as a consequence of the high oil consumption. The error isn’t permanent, but it does reappear occasionally.
Before committing to a rebuild, I’d really appreciate advice from those with direct experience:
Is pistons + rings replacement the correct approach in most CXEB oil consumption cases?
Has this actually resolved the issue long-term for anyone here?
Are there updated or revised piston / ring part numbers or newer design variations that should be used instead of the original ones?
Any critical machining steps, tolerances, or known pitfalls?
Anything else worth addressing while the engine is open?
I’m not looking for guesses — solid real-world experience, measurements, and rebuild outcomes would be extremely helpful.
Thanks in advance, and I appreciate any insight you can share.
Start here....

 
Start here....

I went through that thread and there is a lot of good info on dicgnostics but not on the fixes and if the issue happen again.


As I will pay for this repair out of the pocket I want to make sure I'm doing the right repair and that the parts that I'm chaning are not the same that broke before.

Basicaly I'm trying to avoid to do this repair again in the future
 
Hi everyone,
I’m looking for some help and real-world experience from members who have dealt with CXEB 2.0 BiTDI engines, especially regarding engine rebuilds and oil consumption issues.
Vehicle details:
Engine: CXEB 2.0 BiTDI
Year: 2016
Mileage: 181,000 km
Oil consumption: ~1L / 1,000 km
Aside from the oil consumption, the engine runs well: good power, no major drivability issues, and no permanent fault codes. DPF regenerations appear normal and I’m monitoring related values regularly.
I’ve gone through many existing forum threads, but I haven’t found a case that clearly matches my situation or a universally agreed root cause — so I’m hoping to get input from people who’ve actually dealt with this hands-on.
What I’ve observed so far:
I don’t see signs of turbo-related oil issues (no excessive oil in charge pipes/intercooler, no blue smoke under boost, no abnormal turbo noise)
No visible external oil leaks
Oil consumption is steady, not sudden or rapidly worsening
After inspection and discussion, my mechanic is suggesting a piston and piston rings replacement, suspecting internal wear as the main cause.
Additionally, from time to time I get a P042000 fault code, which seems to indicate that the exhaust / aftertreatment system is struggling, likely as a consequence of the high oil consumption. The error isn’t permanent, but it does reappear occasionally.
Before committing to a rebuild, I’d really appreciate advice from those with direct experience:
Is pistons + rings replacement the correct approach in most CXEB oil consumption cases?
Has this actually resolved the issue long-term for anyone here?
Are there updated or revised piston / ring part numbers or newer design variations that should be used instead of the original ones?
Any critical machining steps, tolerances, or known pitfalls?
Anything else worth addressing while the engine is open?
I’m not looking for guesses — solid real-world experience, measurements, and rebuild outcomes would be extremely helpful.
Thanks in advance, and I appreciate any insight you can share.
First port of call get a compression test done that . Get the oil analysed. That should point you in the right direction rebuild / new short motor . Good luck.
 
I went through that thread and there is a lot of good info on dicgnostics but not on the fixes and if the issue happen again.
I was reading it myself a while ago and I left with the same impression.

In particular:

What was the issue with the original monoblock (not about the turbo) ?
What did VW to fix the issue with the new/updated monoblock?

I understand that VW have not made the above public, but maybe something leaked or some good mechanic found it out.
Does VW sell updated pistons/rings for such monoblock?
Of crankshaft bearings/bushings?
 
Last edited:
I went through that thread and there is a lot of good info on dicgnostics but not on the fixes and if the issue happen again.


As I will pay for this repair out of the pocket I want to make sure I'm doing the right repair and that the parts that I'm chaning are not the same that broke before.

Basicaly I'm trying to avoid to do this repair again in the future
The post details the issue and repair.

If you are loosing oil, then you test the compression on all the cylinders... If it's low then the block is wor and you need new engine block & pistons.... Plus DPF,cat. Labda sensors due to contamination.

If the compression test passes the chance is it's the turbo, so new bitutbo needed....Plus DPF,cat. Labda sensors due to contamination

.
 
I was reading it myself a while ago and I left with the same impression.

In particular:

What was the issue with the original monoblock (not about the turbo) ?
What did VW to fix the issue with the new/updated monoblock?

I understand that VW have not made the above public, but maybe something leaked or some good mechanic found it out.
Does VW sell updated pistons/rings for such monoblock?
Of crankshaft bearings/bushings?
VW sells the new engine block as original engine block is too soft and wears prematurely.

A re-piston job with new rings will not fix a worn bore.

The only fix on a low compression cxeb is a new revised block and pistons... (Since 2019 the blocks were made bettt and don't have the same issue)

Or

Replace the whole engine with a 199ps CXEC engine, that was introduced in 2019 that doesn't have the same problem.
 
Last edited:
VW sells the new engine block as original engine block is to soft and wears prematurely.

A re piston job with new rings will not fix a worn bore.

The only fix on a low compression cxeb is a new revised block... (Since 2019 the blocks were made bettt and don't have the same issue)

Or

Replace the whole engine with a 199ps CXEC engine, that was introduced in 2019 that doesn't have the same problem.
Very interesting, thanks.
So you think that the monoblock problem is with the cylinder linings?

In case of complete (non-OEM) engine re-build do you think that cylinder re-bore and/or re-treatment/or replacement (if the engine has "wet" lining that can be extracted) is a possibility?
I know that it is a lot of fine work, but there are still some good motorists and for a dozen thousand pounds there is something that can be done.
I had that done on motorbike engines for a fraction of such money. I mean smaller engines, but possibly higher tech than a CXEB.

BTW,
Does VW make "factory rebuilds" of the CXEB, or do you have to choose between a new/updated monoblock and a new CXEC motor?
 
No rebore job available, no liners. Full replacement block only.

3rd party garages have to do the same, get a new short block.

VW only offers cxeb short block shipped on a pallet.

So some people use a CXEC from a crash damaged van instead.
 
Is the CXEC engine a drop in replacement? Can I change the engine block and reuse the same components(turbo, electrical harnes etc.) or it's a "full swap"

Where can I buy "new short block" for CXEB or CXEC?
 
A new long block engine comes with no ancilstories.... Just the new engine on pallet.. sump,block, head.

You need to swap for own turbo, pipes, pumps, looms etc.


Via VW dealership,

Or


Or

A local VW Indy will buy on your behalf with a trade discount.
 
Where did you got a brand new engine and how much did it cost?
Also did the new engine come with any upgraded parts? How can we know that if we invest in a new engine or a rebuild this issue won't happen again in 50 k km ?
The engine was ordered direct from VW supplied with new injectors and glow plugs etc . On top of that timing belt kit water pump etc . I had anything contaminated oil had touched replaced along with a new intake manifold as that was choked thanks to the egr. A company called Darkside Developments in Barnsley did the work for me. I chose them because they have a lot of experience in doing this particular job and could also do some other modifications for me at the same time. I can't rate their work highly enough. Everything is factory , no missing or wrong fasteners anywhere. They actually did a YouTube video on the difference between the old and revised engine , it's mainly piston and ring design that was the flaw with the early engines.
As for cost the engine alone was £7500 then turbos , coolers , pipe work, suspension, Dyno time etc etc.
I have a healthy 250 bhp van now and am very happy apart from a very depleted piggy bank!
 
Back
Top