Nice build, the poser shots are great. I have seen an allroad do some cool off roading in this forum posted by the soft roader guys from Texas. For most people these are luxury family haulers with the Quattro for bad weather, so nice to see you build yours to be expedition and off road worthy.
Thank you! Can't wait to get it out on some real trails.
Replaced the turn signal stalk this weekend. It wasn't as bad as I thought it would be, but it was still a bit of a pain. Audi packaging is nothing if not tight and complicated, so getting the panels for the column apart and then back together correctly was the worst part of the whole job. Oh, and the fact that they use a different type of electrical connector with different ways to unclip them for every freaking connection. Oh well, it's done.
Airbag out:
The one triple square bolt holding on the steering wheel (annoying):
If anyone ever tackles something similar to this on this generation Audi/VW (maybe others, I don't know), make sure to tape the clockspring in place! Otherwise you will run into all kinds of headaches with the steering angle sensor and it will throw off the ESP and ABS system until you recalibrate it in VAGCOM. Fixable for sure, but an unnecessary headache:
New hotness VS old and busted:
Luckily the new turn stalk worked perfectly, but the new hazard light switch/relay they sent me did not work. It would just stay locked on or off and wouldn't flash. Luckily my old one actually still worked fine, so I just put that back in. I bought both just to be safe, so the new one will be going back so I can get my $20 back. Cheap as hell, I guess you get what you pay for.
Next I tried to install the skidplate, but ran into some issues. I bought the plate used off of a guy on another forum, and he had told me that it was actually the skidplate for the A6, and not the Allroad. That meant the front mounting locations were a bit different, and they actually tie into the plastic tray that held in the splash guard in the front, but those mounting points were completely torn out by the previous owner offroading, so I'll have to drill some new holes in the skidplate to mount it to the bottom of the front carrier instead -- which is where the actual Allroad version of the skidplate bolts in, so it will be more sturdy this way. That will be a lot of measuring and some drilling that will have to wait until next weekend.
This skidplate is plenty beefy, though. It will definitely be able to take some hits once it's installed. I'll have to take some better shots of it later to show the thickness.
Up on ramps trying to install it next to my buddy's 1944 Desoto Firedome Coupe that he's restoring. It's ************* gigantic! It has to be close to 20ft long, and it's a coupe.
Other than that I was just trying to take care of a slow oil leak I have from the rear oil distribution block to the turbo feed lines. One side is weeping a bit of oil, and it's bugging the **** out of me. I might have to remove it and try a different crush washer, because I think it's still leaking after torquing it down some more. Also the rear bags are starting to sag overnight, so it's time to order up a new set. I knew these were on their last legs when I bought it, so I was going to have to replace them eventually anyway.