P0011 or P0021 codes, a rattle, and an oil-pressure light that flickers?

Audi S5 4.2 FSI Cam Adjuster Solenoid & Tensioner Replacement
at your home.

🚗 2008–2015 Audi 4.2 FSI V8 📋 S5 (4.2 FSI), A6 4.2 🔴 Full-day job — done right at your home

The 4.2 FSI's cam adjuster solenoids clog their filter screens and the chain tensioner bleeds down — so variable valve timing loses authority and the top end rattles. We replace solenoids and tensioner at your home.

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What's actually failing.

The 4.2 FSI V8 in the S5 and A6 adjusts its cam timing hydraulically: solenoid valves meter oil pressure to the cam adjusters, advancing and retarding the cams on command. Each solenoid has a fine mesh filter screen protecting it — and over years of heat and normal oil aging, those screens load up with debris. A starved solenoid responds slowly or not at all, the adjusters lose their authority, and the ECU logs P0011 and P0021 as the banks miss their timing targets.

The chain tensioner ages on the same oil-pressure system and fails the classic way — bleeding down, letting the chain run slack and rattle, particularly at start-up. The combination is distinctive: VVT codes on both banks, rough running as cam timing wanders, audible rattle, and often a low-oil-pressure warning flickering at hot idle as the worn hydraulic components bleed off more pressure than the system can spare.

The repair targets exactly what's failed: new cam adjuster solenoids (clogged screens aren't reliably cleanable — replacement is the proper fix), a new chain tensioner, and fresh oil of the correct spec. With pressure delivery restored, the adjusters regain their authority, the VVT codes stop returning, and the V8 idles and pulls the way a 4.2 FSI should.

The symptoms.

If your Audi is doing any of these, this is the likely cause:

  • Check engine light with P0011 or P0021 (cam timing over-advanced/performance)
  • Top-end rattle, especially at start-up
  • Rough or uneven idle
  • Low oil pressure warning flickering at hot idle
  • Hesitation and flat spots as cam timing wanders
  • Codes returning on both banks shortly after being cleared

What this job typically costs.

$3,000–$4,500
what dealers typically quote for this repair
Our approach is different: one flat quote for the complete job, given before any work starts — parts, labour, everything. No hourly meter, no surprise add-ons. And if a smaller fix solves it, that's what we'll tell you.

The complete fix includes.

  • New cam adjuster solenoids (with photos of the clogged screens that came out)
  • New timing chain tensioner
  • Seals and gaskets disturbed during access
  • Fresh oil and filter to the correct specification
  • VVT function test — commanded vs actual cam timing on both banks
  • Fault-code clear and road test
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How this works at your home.

A full day at your home, working at the top of the V8 — the solenoids and tensioner are reachable without major teardown, which makes this one of the more driveway-friendly jobs on a 4.2 FSI. We finish with a live VVT test, watching commanded versus actual cam timing on both banks with a scan tool, so the fix is verified with data rather than just a quiet idle.

Why not to wait.

Cam timing stuck off-target means more than codes — the engine runs with compromised combustion timing, costing power and economy daily. The sharper risk is the tensioner: a bleeding tensioner on an interference V8 is the standard prelude to chain slap, guide wear, and eventually a skip that bends valves. And if the oil-pressure light is flickering at hot idle, the hydraulic system is telling you its margins are gone. This is a fix-it-at-the-codes-stage job.

Frequently asked questions.

Can this be done at my home?

Yes — it's top-of-engine work, very much driveway territory. A day's labour, finished with a scan-tool VVT verification on both banks so you see the cam timing tracking its targets before we leave.

What's behind the dealer price on this job?

Multiple OEM solenoids plus the tensioner, and several hours of V8 labour at dealer rates — that's the $3,000–4,500 range. We quote one flat price for the complete job, parts and verification included, before any work starts.

Can't the solenoid screens just be cleaned?

They can be cleaned enough to look better — not reliably enough to trust. The screens are fine mesh, debris embeds in them, and a cleaned solenoid that re-clogs in three months wastes the entire labour bill. New solenoids are the version of this fix that doesn't come back.

Does this mean my oil pump or engine is failing?

Usually not — the flickering pressure light is typically the worn solenoids and tensioner bleeding off pressure, not a failing pump. We check actual oil pressure during diagnosis to be sure. If the readings point somewhere deeper, you'll hear it straight before any parts go in.

Already holding a dealer or shop quote for this?

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.

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Is your Audi doing this right now?

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