No Crank, No Start Troubleshooting (2013 VW GTI -2.0T)

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  • čas přidán 25. 12. 2017
  • The testing methods shown in this video can be applied to ANY no start, no crank condition.
    working on a 13 gti, veh is a no crank no start, the starter just clicks, lets do a few simple voltage checks and a few visual inspections, I hope you guys enjoy this video and thanks for watching
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 126

  • @ScannerDanner
    @ScannerDanner Před 6 lety +36

    Nice find Tommy. Years ago I misdiagnosed a seized up engine on a VW that ended up being the starter gear jammed into the flywheel. Just want to point out to other viewers that if you do not have a visual like Tommy did here (hole in the block), you may want to unbolt your starter BEFORE condemning the engine as being seized. A hard lesson learned by me.

    • @frap6790
      @frap6790 Před 6 lety

      ScannerDanner good point, did the starter still make the classic "loud click" in that case?

    • @ScannerDanner
      @ScannerDanner Před 6 lety

      I don't remember, this was probably 15 years ago. What I do remember is the owner selling the car for $500 to our transmission instructor at the school, so I was made fully aware of my misdiagnosis. I still feel really bad about that one. The car was probably worth $3500-4000

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 Před 6 lety +2

      I bet that was hard to explain afterwards. :)) he did a very wise thing fairly early on, tried to turn it over by hand!

    • @leocheckup6645
      @leocheckup6645 Před 6 lety

      Parece que o motor não aguentou, aqui no Brasil pra por tudo novo tem custo elevado.

    • @PositiveLeadDiagnostics
      @PositiveLeadDiagnostics  Před 6 lety

      agreed if I didn't see that hole I was pulling a few things off of that engine first, serp belt and starter

  • @wrenchtwotwoeightzero2430

    Watched this vid a year or so ago and a lot of this stuff was foreign to me. But now that I’m in classes this really helped me clarify a lot of what we are doing in class, thanks!

  • @baxrok2.
    @baxrok2. Před 6 lety

    Wow, that was a huge hole! Looks like the entire piston came out. lol Super quick diagnosis Tom. Thanks!

  • @stuzman52
    @stuzman52 Před 6 lety

    Thanks for sharing Tom and hope you had a great Christmas! Someone is not going to have a great Christmas! Don't work too hard!!

  • @grumpysgarage4790
    @grumpysgarage4790 Před 6 lety +17

    “Well there’s your problem lady” - Eric O

  • @johnaclark1
    @johnaclark1 Před 6 lety

    The click sounded too strong and the mods under the hood told me this might be more than a bad starter or crusty cable! Sweet video, Tommy!

  • @whitetiger8652
    @whitetiger8652 Před 6 lety

    Definitely had a blow out. Thanks for the vid!

  • @mph5896
    @mph5896 Před 6 lety +6

    If you rename this video "starter voltage drop" you may get better search results/more people seeing this video. Great testing technique on voltage drop.

  • @jesusmalagon4336
    @jesusmalagon4336 Před 6 lety

    Thanks for shering your knowledge and experience

  • @roadkill5333
    @roadkill5333 Před 6 lety +5

    Nice one, Tom! I didn't see you pull the pin, but we saw what happened to the grenade!!!!
    You can rename this video, "how to drain the oil, when the drain plug is too tight"!!
    Or, you could call it, "do we really need a pcv valve, or can we vent the block naturally"!!
    Or, my personal favorite, "4 cylinders? I only wanted 3!!"

  • @Nabeelco
    @Nabeelco Před 6 lety +12

    The moment I saw the intake mods I thought to myself: "I bet this thing needs and engine."

  • @simonwelch560
    @simonwelch560 Před 6 lety +1

    That's going to be a " Do you want the bad news or the even more bad news" conversation.

  • @wyattoneable
    @wyattoneable Před 6 lety

    Holly crap! Talk about catastrophic failure. Sucks for the customer though. Great one Tom.

  • @RedondoBeach2
    @RedondoBeach2 Před 4 lety

    Good troubleshooting sir.

  • @yousefsokhanvar1060
    @yousefsokhanvar1060 Před 3 lety

    This is a good diagnostic .
    Thanks,

  • @exmotorsports
    @exmotorsports Před 6 lety

    Well that took a serious left turn...That piston rebound spring gave up.!
    And let me guess, the customer loaned her car to a really good friend when this happened.. and that's why she didn't hear the BOOM.? Hahaha
    Thanks for sharing it with us Tom

  • @petar443
    @petar443 Před 6 lety +1

    The hardest thing for me to learn while watching you-tube videos about car fixing was the "Voltage drop". Even Vehicle Bus system is easier :)

  • @halopersin
    @halopersin Před 6 lety

    Another great video! I hope this diag was customer pay. Easy hour!

  • @classicxl
    @classicxl Před 4 lety

    Is the starter on a 14 Jetta tdi under the air box .i shut the car off and 5 min later went to restart it nothing only 1 click

  • @train4905
    @train4905 Před 2 lety

    Wow that was fantastic.

  • @BrandonF601
    @BrandonF601 Před 6 lety

    Damn brother....thats heavy..Merry Christmas to him lol.

  • @markferraro5250
    @markferraro5250 Před 6 lety

    I was thinking scannerdanner Mini until I saw that hole excellent video Tom

  • @robinsonsmotorcycleandauto3929

    That's is bad guess they forgot to mention the noise it had for awhile lol. Good job Tommy

  • @stevenjames7073
    @stevenjames7073 Před 6 lety

    Thank u for sharing.

  • @speed7625
    @speed7625 Před rokem

    What should the volts be at the signal wire..

  • @tomtaz9102
    @tomtaz9102 Před rokem

    Hi I have a gti 2014 it’s not cranking or starting what should I do thanks

  • @EXOVCDS
    @EXOVCDS Před 6 lety +17

    Something had enough, wanted to get out... and got out! =)

  • @DylanRabier
    @DylanRabier Před 6 lety

    Oops 😁 Nice one Tom. Thx!

  • @upupandaway5646
    @upupandaway5646 Před 2 lety

    Great info

  • @rp5029
    @rp5029 Před 4 lety

    Was there a piece of black tape over that super annoying oil light by any chance?

  • @virtisconsole12
    @virtisconsole12 Před 3 lety

    Wow I would have liked to been there to listen to how you explained the reason for the starter not turning over the motor to the owner. I assume it was towed in. That’s a hell of a situation, never seen that in my time around VW and Audi motors going on 20yrs

  • @themechanic6117
    @themechanic6117 Před 6 lety

    I had a similar case not too long ago, customer wanted me to change the starter....didn't need it, engine would not turn . It had an internal problem. When it did run it had the loudest rod knock 😂

  • @nicknicu1787
    @nicknicu1787 Před 6 lety

    WOW!!!! 😮😮😮😮😮 Good one Tom!!! Lol!

  • @ppeterson9359
    @ppeterson9359 Před 6 lety

    Sure would be interesting to hear the backstory on this one!

  • @grbeiz
    @grbeiz Před 4 lety

    Empty oil as it emptied it from the hole. No?

  • @Pdubforever1
    @Pdubforever1 Před 4 lety

    Good call

  • @maini51
    @maini51 Před 3 lety

    Check the wire leading leading to the solenoid of the starter motor. It usually breaks.

  • @kevincampbell8298
    @kevincampbell8298 Před 6 lety

    Were there any mods to the ecm or motor? Looks like there was a blow out sale! LOL

  • @worsttintentions
    @worsttintentions Před 6 lety

    It’s sad to see that on a gti, but if it’s because of lack of maintenance then it’s they brought it upon themselves. Awesome video!

  • @blockbertus
    @blockbertus Před 6 lety +1

    That must have been a loud bang when that happened. Did they really "just" bring it in for a crank, no start?!
    Tbh, when I heard that starter clicking, I already thought "Well, that's not going to be good...".

  • @jessicagrythe7990
    @jessicagrythe7990 Před 5 lety

    We have a 2010 VW cc and it wont start. The radio comes on but the windows wont go up or down. The dont crank or anything

    • @thomas1x635
      @thomas1x635 Před 4 lety

      what ended up being the diagnosis and did you get it fixed?

  • @Turbotomass
    @Turbotomass Před 6 lety +3

    how is the complaint a no start.... engine knock like crazy wasn't a concern?

  • @gman.7123
    @gman.7123 Před 6 lety

    Maybe timing chain tensioner ? Let us know if you find out what cause it.

    • @PositiveLeadDiagnostics
      @PositiveLeadDiagnostics  Před 6 lety

      I have some pictures I will upload to the facebook page, waiting to see what happens with this veh

  • @viz_aviz9189
    @viz_aviz9189 Před 6 lety

    Jesus loves you man you have a holy vehicle Lol

  • @timrepairs
    @timrepairs Před 5 lety

    👏👏👏

  • @rrmech11
    @rrmech11 Před 6 lety +3

    That block has windows 2017 version.

  • @nainka11
    @nainka11 Před 5 lety

    Needs a new engine .............so need to check the oil ?............Lol! should be some in the sump somewhere....along with the bits of the engine.............did you work out if the starter had a problem ? Maybe try topping up the oil and trying again.... might start with a good battery. Gaffer tape across the block.......top up the oil and run on three cyclinders and save on fuel....seems 3 cylinder jobbies are all the rage at the moment.

  • @becomematrix
    @becomematrix Před 6 lety

    Wow!

  • @vitaminb4869
    @vitaminb4869 Před 6 lety

    Wow. Unreal! Did someone not bother to check the oil level periodically??!

  • @JOHNPHUFNAGEL
    @JOHNPHUFNAGEL Před 6 lety

    What do you mean there's a hole in my block? It ran fine last night when I shut it off.. lol

  • @haywardsautomotive6156

    Now that's hilarious customer bringing it in for a no crank...It wouldn't start & really the engine was running good

  • @chekelley6861
    @chekelley6861 Před 6 lety +4

    High amperage can cause a larger voltage drop than normal I think.

    • @fredflintstone8048
      @fredflintstone8048 Před 6 lety +2

      That's true. Voltage drop is not only a function of resistance, but also current draw. E = I x R. A starter trying to turn a seized engine is going to draw more current. It will also get very hot, thus the smoke. It's also possible to damage the internal windings / brushes, commutator etc.

    • @PositiveLeadDiagnostics
      @PositiveLeadDiagnostics  Před 6 lety

      I wondered if the starter motor heat or the high amperage affected the voltage drop

    • @fredflintstone8048
      @fredflintstone8048 Před 6 lety +1

      It's A pretty well accepted fact that heat in a wire will increase it's resistance and increase the voltage drop across the wire as a result (ohms law). It's sort of a better known fact that voltage drop will increase due to the increased current in the wire (ohm's law) and this will generally be the most important, or greatest cause regardless of temperature change. So you have both things going on here, but the primary cause of the voltage drop is High current which is also the cause of the increased heat in everything. I other words, If you measured the voltage drop before the temperature of the wire had a chance to go up, you would have measured the higher voltage drop, and then it would have increase to some degree as the heat increased. Even if you could keep the wires cold somehow, you would still see the increased voltage drop across with wires. Why the high current in the first place? Locked rotor on the starter motor due to the seized engine. If you look at many motor specs in general they will have a spec called 'Locked rotor current' which is always extremely high.
      It might be an interesting experiment to measure the resistance of one of the wires when it's cold, and then again when it's hot with your ohm meter. If the current is known, then one can calculate the voltage drop across that wire (E = I x R). I feel that understanding this can also be quite helpful in troubleshooting things like voltage drops across the ground in a car and other wiring connections. If you're getting a high drop, but you know your current is low, you know you have a bad (corroded or whatever) ground. If you're getting a higher drop, but your current is high, than it could be normal. It's good to be able to measure current draw at times.

    • @zvonimirbobicex-4962
      @zvonimirbobicex-4962 Před 6 lety

      high resistance is WHAT affected the voltage drop..and high resistance is about either too much current or too little wire..you know, it is always one relative to the other..i tend to believe that heat is only a byproduct/effect of high resistance, not the cause..scannerdanner would disagree, though..ok, let me rephrase, maybe not a byproduct per se..bcus, I think both resistance and heat come together hand in hand..simultaneously..shouldnt view them separately..bcus, even if u were to alaska at -45 celsius, the heat would still be produced, but dissipated to the environment at a much faster rate..

    • @fredflintstone8048
      @fredflintstone8048 Před 6 lety +1

      It's always good to look at wires in any circuit as resistors. The amount of heat in a wire or resistor (same thing) is caused by the amount of current flow. The higher the current flow, the higher the heat. There is a heat coefficient to the resistance which is usually positive, but it's always a byproduct of current. The more electrons being pushed through a resistor, the more drag on the stationary (not free) electrons causing heat. Heat will make the resistance increase, but it's the tail of the dog, not the dog. As I already mentioned, the high current and thus higher than normal voltage drop on the wires in the starter circuit is caused by the locked rotor. Locked rotor current on a starter motor can be 3-4 times the normal current draw. This is where the heat is coming from, and yes will cause the resistance of the wire to increase and thus cause a larger voltage drop, but not as much as the current variation. Ohm's law IS a law. E = I x R which we can apply to one of the wires. Just for an example we'll say that the resistance of one of the wires is 0.01 ohms. For our example I'll use 200 amps for locked rotor, and 60 amps for normal current on the starter if the engine turns over. The numbers I'm using are arbitrary, but the math is what's important. E(voltage drop across the wire) = 200 X 0.01 = 2 volts for the locked rotor. E = 60 X 0.01 = 600 mv. This is basic electrical theory that applies in all fields, automotive being one of them.
      Another factor to consider is the size of the wire when considering it's resistance and temperature. Looking at an electrical code book we see that wire sizes are related to the amperage being carried by the wire. Most starter wires on cars are sized large enough (gauge) to be able to maintain a certain amount of reasonable starter current for a reasonable amount of time. Locked rotor current will often exceed wire ratings, and this will cause the wire to heat up faster, and to a higher temperature, possibly damaging the wires as well as the starter because the windings, commutator, brushes were also not meant for locked rotor current and will happen if one keeps the key on too long. One saving factor is if the battery is not in such great condition and can only deliver a limited amount of current.
      Bottom line, I don't think it's good troubleshooting practice to assume that higher than normal voltage drops on wires is simply due to heat. It's better to think in terms of current in circuits first and foremost, but not forgetting that heat will increase the resistance to some degree which will in turn increase E drop on the wire to some degree. It does take a fairly substantial temperature increase on a wire to change it's resistance significantly. Here's some info on that topic:
      www.cirris.com/learning-center/general-testing/special-topics/177-temperature-coefficient-of-copper

  • @bbkmm1
    @bbkmm1 Před 6 lety +1

    Bummer. Scanner Danner had a similar issue with a Mini. Lucky that was just a seized bearing on the alternator.

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 Před 6 lety

      my old chevy iron will crank over and fire up burning the alt belt off. I know cause water has frozen inside the alt's more than once and bearing seizures, stupid 90's+ vans, the 80's and older vans everything was further back and you'd have to garden hose spray directly to ice them up.
      the "hot" college grad engineers, were winners yet again. what pleases me, is they have to deal with their own fsckups as it breaks down on them! :))

  • @hxc7273
    @hxc7273 Před 6 lety +2

    This car came in as a no crank? The owner didn’t notice the engine blow up?

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 Před 6 lety +2

      that is the more alarming part, they live, breathe and drive among us :))

    • @gabet3754
      @gabet3754 Před 6 lety +1

      Nick Johnson
      Woman driver

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 Před 6 lety +1

      haha, but no guarantee it was a woman driver, plenty of snowflakes about ;0

  • @Pyro17059
    @Pyro17059 Před 6 lety

    Gotta love those..."it just shut off and then wouldn't start/crank" never any mention of it making a horrible noise before shutting off.

  • @GG-GODZILLA91
    @GG-GODZILLA91 Před rokem

    vw 2014 passat check license plate light no power on

  • @Gagik5779
    @Gagik5779 Před 6 lety

    Bro I have question about passat b5 pls your name

  • @fieldsofomagh
    @fieldsofomagh Před 6 lety +2

    That hole could be for ventilation and anyway who said an engine needs oil ? Next patient please. No smoking during working hours 💥

  • @westtexas501
    @westtexas501 Před 6 lety

    Ah replace Pcm send them on their way !!! 😂😂😂 jk nice diag man.

  • @CHIBA280CRV
    @CHIBA280CRV Před 6 lety

    Wow , junk yard time !

  • @hoshyarmohammad5659
    @hoshyarmohammad5659 Před 6 lety

    👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @ozzstars_cars
    @ozzstars_cars Před 6 lety +3

    I bet the customer never heard any weird noises and they can't remember the last time the oil was changed. lol

  • @tp133
    @tp133 Před 4 lety

    Can a bad starter make the engine seem like a seized engine

    • @PositiveLeadDiagnostics
      @PositiveLeadDiagnostics  Před 4 lety +1

      It’s possible that the starter could jam in the flywheel and cause it not to turn. Remove the starter and see if it turns. I’ve also seen ac compressors lock up and create the same scenario. So you could remove the serp belt too

    • @tp133
      @tp133 Před 4 lety

      @@PositiveLeadDiagnostics can that make my car turn off while driving?

    • @PositiveLeadDiagnostics
      @PositiveLeadDiagnostics  Před 4 lety

      Very unlikely. If the ac compressor locked up while driving it would probably smoke the belt first.

    • @tp133
      @tp133 Před 4 lety

      @@PositiveLeadDiagnostics the belt did not smoke. What can be my next idea off why it turned off while driving. Battery is also fine

    • @PositiveLeadDiagnostics
      @PositiveLeadDiagnostics  Před 4 lety

      Try to turn the engine with a ratchet

  • @unlimited408mike
    @unlimited408mike Před 2 lety

    Nice lol 😆

  • @joachimjohan1215
    @joachimjohan1215 Před 5 lety +1

    WHATTTT THAA HELLL!!!!!!! HOW DO PEOPLE MISS THE ENGINE BLOWING UP?!!!!!!

  • @THREESHOTBANDIT
    @THREESHOTBANDIT Před 6 lety +2

    Dang! ......oil pressure is way overrated, lol.

  • @HomieHektor
    @HomieHektor Před 6 lety

    Damn that must suck, when your car doesn't start and they tell you that you need an ENGINE 😖 I'd hate to be on the receiving end !

    • @PositiveLeadDiagnostics
      @PositiveLeadDiagnostics  Před 6 lety +3

      what if the "they" is you and your telling yourself you need an engine, that would suck too lol

    • @HomieHektor
      @HomieHektor Před 6 lety

      Positive Lead Diagnostics yeah, been there 🤑

  • @tjtryon5456
    @tjtryon5456 Před 4 lety

    Should also check that none of cylinder are liquid locked with water, oil, or even gas

  • @leannecryder8079
    @leannecryder8079 Před rokem

    you where is location how to adjust then you walk ❤

  • @5Dale65
    @5Dale65 Před 6 lety +1

    Very quick way to check if the engine isn't locked up when you have a manual: Just lift one of the driven wheels, put in in highest gear and try to spin the wheel by hand. If it isn't a big block V8 diesel, it should rotate quite easily.

    • @ahwee77329
      @ahwee77329 Před 6 lety

      5Dale65 kinda lost here , so your saying lift the car one side with the longer axle,which is the driven shaft correct ?then spin by hand ,if it spins then it's okay ,if not engine seized ?thanks

  • @gmanjimbo3203
    @gmanjimbo3203 Před 6 lety +1

    Probably the owners son or daughter was the last one driving it.

  • @pvfeB7Ax
    @pvfeB7Ax Před 6 lety

    They probably over revved it. I know an enthusiast when I see one.

  • @nainka11
    @nainka11 Před 5 lety

    Just a scratch.......come on......engine good for thousands of miles yet......drop of oil and the engine will be up and running........Really funny ! surely there had to be a few hits before the engine wouldn't start............like a loud bang and grinding halt. The technical diagostics is like checking the pulse on a decapitated chicken. Lol! and then..........the guys face was a picture.........like he had just been caught by his mother having sex..........rabbit in the headlights..............classic fun vid.......Thanks and keep up the good work.

  • @mil7onautodiagnostics633

    Weird when a car comes to the shop for a no crank complaint and no history behind. still good video tho.

  • @gbowne1
    @gbowne1 Před 6 lety

    Probably would have showed close to 0 oil pressure. That would ruin someones day. Good one nonetheless

  • @Airman..
    @Airman.. Před 6 lety

    JB Weld it, ship it

    • @gabet3754
      @gabet3754 Před 6 lety

      Airman
      Collect your hour diag.

  • @osielcarizales3479
    @osielcarizales3479 Před 5 lety

    haha wow

  • @user-zb1yu7xe6s
    @user-zb1yu7xe6s Před 6 lety

    There is the problem lady !!!

  • @stoicsigma34
    @stoicsigma34 Před 3 lety

    Wow lol

  • @protectyourassests1028

    German engineers make some beautiful machines but, boy do they cause massive headaches for the rest of the world.

  • @dereksimenac8844
    @dereksimenac8844 Před 3 lety

    No testing needed, can hear starter selnoid throwing the bendix into the flywheel, motor just wasn't spinning. Don't understand these young techs wasting time PLAYING with the most complex systems first. Don't get me wrong because I do Coding, programming too but that should not be the first thing they reach for instead of using their sight hearing, smell and common sense First

  • @gmanjimbo3203
    @gmanjimbo3203 Před 6 lety

    Teenagers

  • @deepsquat600
    @deepsquat600 Před 6 lety +2

    Woman driver?? Didnt hear the catastrophic engine failure ?? LOL

  • @haywardsautomotive6156

    Now that's hilarious customer bringing it in for a no crank...It wouldn't start & really the engine was running good

  • @pvfeB7Ax
    @pvfeB7Ax Před 6 lety

    They probably over revved it. I know an enthusiast when I see one.