Folgers said:
09ish Tiguan had a valve cover leak that caused the secondary water pump to die because it was made of plastic, and now covered in oil.
The valve cover holds the cams down, so the engine needed to be removed to gain access to the front of the engine so you can remove the timing chain cover. And then retime the engine.
Im done with VWs.
Que? I've done timing chains on those without removing the engine.
You do remind me of replacing a cam seal on a whiteblock in a P2 chassis Volvo. Remove engine mount, airbox, turbo inlet duct, and engine mount bracket, so you can remove the cam sensors, and then the tone wheels on the backs of the camshafts, so you can install the cam locking tool. Then you remove the intercooler to throttle body duct so you can unbolt the starter and shove it forward so you can access the crankshaft lock access plug. After all that, you can work on the front of the engine to remove the timing belt and cam sprocket, which itself takes about fifteen minutes with a coffee break because the front is so easy to get to.
Actually retiming the engine is interesting because the variable cam hubs are not keyed to the cams and do not have a locked-home position. AND... they are manually adjustable. You get them close, and then you loosen the five adjuster bolts ("Three, sir!") and move the outer sprocket to the correct position. If you run out of adjustment, you loosen the hubs again and shift them a bit and start it over again.
Long 1/2" ratchet holds tension on the crank in one direction, 3/8 ratchet on the cam hub holds the VVT hub against its stop in the other direction, manually adjustable automatic belt tensioner is preloaded to the correct indicator angle for the ambient temperature (and it moves a LOT with engine temp!), torque wrench tightens the little tiny bolts to "that's all the spec is?" Newton-meters.
When I do a P2 timing belt, I don't do the seals unless they are leaking.
On the other hand, the system is idiotproof if the deck height is different from spec, and I'll take a manually adjusted spring loaded tensioner over a fixed tension or a failure-prone hydraulic tensioner. And I'll take a timing belt long before a heavy, noisy, hard to service, oil pressure dependent timing chain any day of the week and twice on Sunday. Volvo were also kind enough to make the timing lock position at roughly 15 degrees from TDC on cylinder 1, so none of the pistons are near the deck, so the valves have no chance of hitting pistons if the cams turn in a way they shouldn't...