Make it function and perhaps it will be beautimous as well.
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
Thanks for the ideas! Orcoaster, i think i may give your suggestion a try. It seems to be the least amount of work and doable with the engine still in the car. I think that with a new bolt, and a built up sprocket it may last for awhile until I decide to either ditch the car or do a proper TDI crank fix. Now that I know what the signs are, change in timing,engine sound, harmonic balancer wobble, I am hopeing that I can somehow visually mark the crank sprocket/bolt and check it and retorque every lets say 500 to 1000 kilometers. Possibly squeek another few klicks out of it. Coaster, have you tried this technique or had success with it? I have a basic wire feed welder and I am a very BASIC welder, would this be adequate? Just out of curiosity, if one were to choose the dowel/pin fix, how deep or how far can you or should you drill into the crank nose?
Hey guys, have decided to pin the crank as I believe that will probably be best for my situation. I managed to drill the sprocket today and that went well, the crank was a little trickier but I managed to get it done.
I think the dowel pin is more a preventative measure than a repair.
The Dowel fix has been done in the 16v world for a while. The link I had was from a Scirocco guy that had done it, they started with 1 and ended up 4 dowels and the stock tab like what he has that is worn down. Those held, and the dowels I am thinking of should be almost as tough as the crank. Any Unbrako or Holocrome or even import dowels should be perfect for what this will do. I wouldn't do it though for no other reason than if I needed another sprocket, I would have to remake it. The TDI one I could buy another and be done. I have heard that even the TDI sprocket isnt quite enough in some TDI builds and they are using dowels on top of it too.