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Tips for wearing in my new Mk7?

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  • Tips for wearing in my new Mk7?

    I got my brand new Mk7 Trendline in manual on Thursday. That night, I took it for an ~80km round trip up the freeway and back to get a feel of the cruise control and handling at 110, part of that was stop start because there was an accident and a few stops down from 90. Other than that, I've been driving round town and occasionally putting my foot down (though my partner says not hard enough).

    I'm wondering if anyone has any tips for wearing the car in. This is my first new car and the dealer didn't tell me anything about wearing it in. Does it even need to be done? I'm a reasonably chill driver, so my car doesn't often go over 3,000RPM unless I'm trying to have fun. Also worth noting that my last car, I only put 30,000km on it in 5 years so wearing this one in might take a while.
    2018 Manual Mk 7.5 110TSI Trendline in Atlantic Blue


  • #2
    Just drive it as you normally would.

    Engines and transmissions are already run and tested, prior to being installed in the car.
    '07 Transporter 1.9 TDI
    '01 Beetle 2.0

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    • #3
      Modern cars don't need running in. Just drive it like you normally would.
      Looking for:- RS4 B7 Avant.
      Current:- Amarok V6 Sportline; Mazda CX-9 Azami AWD
      Previous - Mk 6 R manual; Mk 7 R manual; Passat 130 TDi Wagon. Mk 7.5 Wolfsburg Wagon.

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      • #4
        You should be a bit careful with braking for the first few hundred km as the pads need time to bed in. This mostly because the car might not stop as quickly.

        Likewise, the tyres need a few hundred km to burn off the chemicals used to release the tyre from the mould during manufacture. Again this could just reduce grip levels. It'll probably be gone within 200-300km.

        Personally, I'm always careful for the first 1000km, using the full rev range but not bouncing off the red line, dropping the clutch or putting the car under heavy load (accelerating hard in a high gear).


        Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
        MY08 Mk5 GT Sport - sold
        MY14 Tiguan 118TSI - sold (Mazda3 SP25GT in its place)
        MY16 Golf 7R: sold (Caterham Super 7 and Hyundai i30N in its place)

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        • #5
          Tips for wearing in my new Mk7?

          Freeway driving is literally the worst thing you can do to "run in" a new engine. You need to vary the RPM, vary the speed and put load on the engine (eg accelerate up a hill)
          Last edited by Lucas_R; 13-05-2017, 09:21 PM.
          2017 Ford Fiesta ST the go kart

          2015 Audi SQ5 bi-turbo V6 TDI family hauler

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Lucas_R View Post
            Freeway driving is literally the worst thing you can do to "run in" a new engine. You need to vary the RPM, cary the speed and put load on the engine (eg accelerate up a hill)
            Ditto this. Second worst thing is extended idling. Best thing to do is a few runs up through the hills if you can and keep the revs varying. Freeways and city stop start traffic are not ideal. Lots of people say you don't need to do anything special and so on but they also say using lots of oil can be normal too. Bed the mechanical components in well without labouring, over revving, or glazing up the cylinder bores and you should be rewarded with reliable longevity

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            • #7
              Originally posted by LibraR View Post
              Bed the mechanical components in well without labouring, over revving, or glazing up the cylinder bores and you should be rewarded with reliable longevity
              Could equally be said about using your car all the time too. [emoji2]


              Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
              MY08 Mk5 GT Sport - sold
              MY14 Tiguan 118TSI - sold (Mazda3 SP25GT in its place)
              MY16 Golf 7R: sold (Caterham Super 7 and Hyundai i30N in its place)

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Mattlock View Post
                Could equally be said about using your car all the time too. [emoji2]


                Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
                Haha lol... true. I would have more faith in the longevity of an engine dancing near the rev limiter if it was well bedded in than if it had just rolled if the line though... 😀

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by LibraR View Post
                  Haha lol... true. I would have more faith in the longevity of an engine dancing near the rev limiter if it was well bedded in than if it had just rolled if the line though... [emoji3]
                  Agreed! [emoji106]


                  Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
                  MY08 Mk5 GT Sport - sold
                  MY14 Tiguan 118TSI - sold (Mazda3 SP25GT in its place)
                  MY16 Golf 7R: sold (Caterham Super 7 and Hyundai i30N in its place)

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Lucas_R View Post
                    Freeway driving is literally the worst thing you can do to "run in" a new engine. You need to vary the RPM, cary the speed and put load on the engine (eg accelerate up a hill)
                    I live in Adelaide, it was around 80km or so to get a feel of what the car was like on the freeway since my test drive was exclusively around town, we don't really do freeways here so it's not gonna be a consistent thing.


                    Originally posted by LibraR View Post
                    Ditto this. Second worst thing is extended idling. Best thing to do is a few runs up through the hills if you can and keep the revs varying. Freeways and city stop start traffic are not ideal. Lots of people say you don't need to do anything special and so on but they also say using lots of oil can be normal too. Bed the mechanical components in well without labouring, over revving, or glazing up the cylinder bores and you should be rewarded with reliable longevity
                    I'm sort of holding off on going up into the hills (very popular with enthusiasts round here) till I'm a little more confident with the handling. I'm still getting used to how touchy the brakes are too and last thing I want is for someone impatient getting close and me accidentally hitting them a little too hard... I had DBA T2s and performance pads on my Astra but the Golf brakes even harder than that. As someone mentioned, gotta wear the chemicals off the tyres and brakes.

                    Being Adelaide, my work run in the morning is around 7am and avoids "peak hour" (which is sort of like normal Sydney traffic at worst). So I'm not experiencing too much stop start there other than the many traffic lights but I'm mostly getting up to the speed limit then back down again in those cases.
                    Last edited by Indoctrine; 13-05-2017, 09:21 PM.
                    2018 Manual Mk 7.5 110TSI Trendline in Atlantic Blue

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                    • #11
                      thrashed my 7R as soon as i left the dealership (oil at 80deg first) and have driven it semi hard on the daily, small bursts here and there on the way to and from home. Car has now 55,000ks in almost 2 years, and its been great. Fuel Efficiency sits around 500-550 to a full tank of BP 98.
                      15 Golf R MK7
                      Manual
                      APR Tuned


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                      • #12
                        Yes, Golf PP got redlined out of the dealer's driveway as did our new Tiguan and neither has used a drop of oil between services but then the Tiguan has not got a lot of K's on it yet. All our race motors got the same treatment with no problems and remember that it has warranty if something goes wrong.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by mrmomoz View Post
                          thrashed my 7R as soon as i left the dealership (oil at 80deg first) and have driven it semi hard on the daily, small bursts here and there on the way to and from home. Car has now 55,000ks in almost 2 years, and its been great. Fuel Efficiency sits around 500-550 to a full tank of BP 98.
                          I always wait until the oil temp is north of 80C. I have at least 1 point on each drive where I push it hard.

                          Never got close to 500-550km on a tank unless I do a lot of freeway driving. Typical daily use sees me around the 450-475km mark.


                          Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
                          MY08 Mk5 GT Sport - sold
                          MY14 Tiguan 118TSI - sold (Mazda3 SP25GT in its place)
                          MY16 Golf 7R: sold (Caterham Super 7 and Hyundai i30N in its place)

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                          • #14
                            I took it on a nice run into the hills. Sadly my GPS took me up the freeway to begin with (but it is a very steep freeway). Came back down through the twisties and had awesome fun, handles very nicely.
                            2018 Manual Mk 7.5 110TSI Trendline in Atlantic Blue

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                            • #15
                              I remember that freeway climb from 15 years ago (last time i was in s.a) it is quite steep

                              Hope you enjoy your golf they handle vry well even in a non sport model
                              2017 Golf Alltrack 135tdi All options
                              19 inch Brescia Wheels Golf R brakes front and rear
                              Calipers painted Candy apple gold
                              New rear sway bar and linkages

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