Oil change

Google actually isn’t my friend because the answer for definitive torque figures for VW Transporter engines vary widely to the extent that it would be taking pot luck which I don’t do. My ADHD makes me need to know the exact tightness. I’ve been servicing cars for over 40 years and won’t guess any torque setting.
Well you won’t sleep tonight then as that torque is for a dry thread and you’ll be there days waiting for the sump port to drip dry!
Just heave it up.
 
Google actually isn’t my friend because the answer for definitive torque figures for VW Transporter engines vary widely to the extent that it would be taking pot luck which I don’t do. My ADHD makes me need to know the exact tightness. I’ve been servicing cars for over 40 years and won’t guess any torque setting.
You do right ... I managed to snap two bolts in the forks on my Ducati last year, before I'd reached the required torque (with my new calibrated torque wrench). Ducati do use shite bolts though, odd 'cos you'd think it a premium brand.
 
Google actually isn’t my friend because the answer for definitive torque figures for VW Transporter engines vary widely to the extent that it would be taking pot luck which I don’t do. My ADHD makes me need to know the exact tightness. I’ve been servicing cars for over 40 years and won’t guess any torque setting.
Well pardon me lol.
So , unless you have a freshly calibrated and certified snap on torque angle , torque wrench , ( mine is fondly called excalibar )
Approx 700 quids worth,,,,,,
The 20 pound chinese ebay special special won't be particularly accurate for your OCD.
Head bolts , no guessing , sump bolts , just don't over tighten .
The only risk is stripping the threads ,
Jeez , bet its like that film " sleeping with the enemy " 😴
Better make sure all the labels on the tins of beans in the cupboard face the same angle in relative rotation to the sun , on a Gibbous moon lol
 
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You do right ... I managed to snap two bolts in the forks on my Ducati last year, before I'd reached the required torque (with my new calibrated torque wrench). Ducati do use shite bolts though, odd 'cos you'd think it a premium brand.
Single use bolts probably, but better they snap when tightening than red lining in top gear.
 
Well pardon me lol.
So , unless you have a freshly calibrated and certified snap on torque angle , torque wrench , ( mine is fondly called excalibar )
Approx 700 quids worth,,,,,,
The 20 pound chinese ebay special special won't be particularly accurate for your OCD
Exactly, that’s precisely why I have two RS Pro calibrated torque wrenches.
 
Single use bolts probably, but better they snap when tightening than red lining in top gear.
Nothing in the workshop manual to say they're single use, they're nothing special. But yes better when tightening than the other option for sure!
 
Nothing in the workshop manual to say they're single use, they're nothing special. But yes better when tightening than the other option for sure!
Its interesting how the company that sells them says they're single use and you must buy another!

Id be more worried about the alloy sump than I would about re using a steel pump plug.
 
Its interesting how the company that sells them says they're single use and you must buy another!

Id be more worried about the alloy sump than I would about re using a steel pump plug.

I think some part of it comes due to human error in the past..

Say a sump plug has been left loose, causes damage / inconvenience to customer - dealer claims issue with sump plug over human error / dealing with the situation. Over time VW change procedures to certain jobs, like a sump plug needing to be replaced every time. Once upon a time they weren't a 'replace every time part'
 
Yet when VW are expected to pay for parts under warranty you can bet stuff wont be a "replace every time" item!
 
Exactly, that’s precisely why I have two RS Pro calibrated torque wrenches.
I do not find RS Pro tools particularly good BTW. They are the own brand of RS, probably globally sourced stuff, nothing special. I would trust more the usual Europen tool brnds, Wera, Wiha, Gedore, Usag...
Just saying, I do not think the oil drain plug is critical at all. This is a low (compared to bolt size) torqued bolt, and the final torque will depend mostly on how the seal will get compressed. I would trust my old fashion hand 100%.
 
I do not find RS Pro tools particularly good BTW. They are the own brand of RS, probably globally sourced stuff, nothing special. I would trust more the usual Europen tool brnds, Wera, Wiha, Gedore, Usag...
RS advertise them as being made and calibrated in the UK, although not by whom. Coincidentally, my first wife (nasty cow, although she failed to mention that before I married her) was a director for RS Components, as it was then.
 
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Yet when VW are expected to pay for parts under warranty you can bet stuff wont be a "replace every time" item!
Quite a lot of bits are replace when removed these days to be fair.
VW Extended Warranty won't pay out unless every 'to be replaced' part, is replaced (bolts / seals etc)
 
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Well worth buying a cheap Amazon vacuum pump (re-work the obvious when it falls apart) and withdraw approx’ 5L and then drop the rest.
I use a Lazer 6ltr oil extractor, I removed the oil in two stages, emptied it after 4ltrs had be extracted and removed the the remaining oil. I then removed the sump plug to empty any residue oil. Note when removing the oil filter housing there is a central plastic bolt which drains the filter bowl before you unscrew it to gain access to the oil filter.

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