Your high-pressure fuel pump is losing rail pressure and the regulator's diaphragm is torn — so the injectors starve exactly when the engine asks for full power. We replace both at your home in a day.
Direct injection lives and dies by rail pressure. On these 3.0T-powered A6, A8 and Q7 models, the high-pressure fuel pump has to multiply tank pressure many times over to feed the injectors — and with age, its internals wear to the point where it can't hold target pressure under demand. The fuel pressure regulator fails alongside it: its diaphragm tears, and once that happens precise pressure control is gone.
The symptoms follow the physics. At idle and light cruise, the tired pump keeps up and the car feels fine. Ask for full throttle — an on-ramp pull, a passing move on the 401 — and demand outruns supply: the rail pressure sags, the injectors starve, and the engine hesitates or pulls back right when you need it. Cold starts stretch out into long cranks because the system struggles to build starting pressure. The ECU logs P0087 — fuel rail pressure too low — which is the textbook signature.
Replacing the pump alone while leaving a torn regulator (or vice versa) is how this repair gets done twice. The two parts work as a system, fail on the same clock, and share the same access labour — so the correct job replaces both, verifies rail pressure against spec under load, and closes the case in one visit.
If your Audi is doing any of these, this is the likely cause:
A starving fuel rail leans out the mixture under load — and lean under boost is the condition that damages pistons and valves on a forced-induction engine. The hesitation you feel is the engine protecting itself; the damage risk grows the harder the failing pump is pushed. There's also the practical danger: power that disappears mid-passing-move is a safety problem, not just a mechanical one.
Yes — the pump and regulator are engine-bay jobs, and the safety side comes down to proper depressurization, clean assembly, and a thorough leak check before the engine runs, all of which is standard procedure for us. We verify pressure with a scan tool under real load before the job is called done.
Two genuine OEM fuel components plus several hours of careful labour at dealer rates — high-pressure fuel work isn't rushed, and the parts aren't cheap. We quote one flat price for both parts, all labour and testing before any work starts, so the complete fix costs what we said it would.
Possible, and we check — the low-pressure side has to be healthy before condemning the HPFP. Live rail-pressure data separates the two quickly: a supply-side problem and a high-pressure-side problem leave different fingerprints. You get the diagnosis before the quote, not after the parts.
Same system, same age, same failure window — and a torn regulator diaphragm will sabotage a brand-new pump's pressure control from day one. The labour overlaps almost entirely, so doing both costs little more than doing one and eliminates the repeat visit.
Send it over for a free second opinion. I'll tell you straight what the job actually involves — and if their quote is fair, I'll tell you that too.
Get a Free Second OpinionOther makes:
Describe it to the AI mechanic (bottom right), or get a flat quote for the complete job. We come to you, anywhere in the GTA.
Call/Text 647-450-0406 Get a Flat Quote