OBD can't connect, 2001 TT
Hello,
I have a 2001 Audi TT Quattro. For some reason the OBD reader cannot connect to the car, so no pass on emission test
Here's some information and stuff I tried:
- the car has the original BOSE radio working, and station info is displayed on the dashboard
- engine check light is not on, and I can run the diagnostics from the dashboard, which prints OK at the end
- I checked all the fuses on the side panel
- I cleaned the OBD connector with contact cleaner
- tried 3 different OBD readers (emission test computer, handheld OBD reader at shop, and I have a simple OBD reader), they all error out
- I checked the K-line voltage between pins 4+7, reads 0.18 volts
- I do not have a VAG-COM
- the car was not driven for over a year (due to new babies in the house), the battery was dead so I replaced it
What else can I do to diagnose/fix this problem? I've seen some posts suggesting cleaning radio/HVAC connections.
A mechanic suggested that some cars need to go through certain number of startup/warmup cycles before the OBD works, not sure if that applies.
Should I get a VAG-COM?
Thanks so much,
-lajos
I have a 2001 Audi TT Quattro. For some reason the OBD reader cannot connect to the car, so no pass on emission test

Here's some information and stuff I tried:
- the car has the original BOSE radio working, and station info is displayed on the dashboard
- engine check light is not on, and I can run the diagnostics from the dashboard, which prints OK at the end
- I checked all the fuses on the side panel
- I cleaned the OBD connector with contact cleaner
- tried 3 different OBD readers (emission test computer, handheld OBD reader at shop, and I have a simple OBD reader), they all error out
- I checked the K-line voltage between pins 4+7, reads 0.18 volts
- I do not have a VAG-COM
- the car was not driven for over a year (due to new babies in the house), the battery was dead so I replaced it
What else can I do to diagnose/fix this problem? I've seen some posts suggesting cleaning radio/HVAC connections.
A mechanic suggested that some cars need to go through certain number of startup/warmup cycles before the OBD works, not sure if that applies.
Should I get a VAG-COM?
Thanks so much,
-lajos
i found problem
maybe your problem is same, too..
i had a superchips on my car and i cannot connect to car with superchips..
now i changed my eprom and put different one, now i can connect in a second
im sooo happy... do u have something like this on car ?
maybe your problem is same, too..i had a superchips on my car and i cannot connect to car with superchips..
now i changed my eprom and put different one, now i can connect in a second
im sooo happy... do u have something like this on car ?
Well, I'm not the first owner of the car, so it's possibility. Although this car has passed inspection since I got it (they need to connect to obd for smog), so I'm afraid I have a different issue.
But I'll check for superchip. Thanks for the tip!
But I'll check for superchip. Thanks for the tip!
Old thread, but looking for help.
Wife's 2002 TT dies on road, and will crank, won't fire. I get there 20-30 minutes later, everything checks out, no obvious defects, she cranks it starts right away. we're three miles from home, drives home, and it dies on our lane. I grab my OBD tool, won't connect. about 20-30 minutes go by, and it connects, shows a P0322 code, and starts and we drive it to the house, I backed it into the garage and pull it onto a set of ramps.
Any idea if this is common? There is a relay that feeds the ECM, can it cause this issue. I am an old Cat mechanic, I have a preconceived notion that the power supply being cut to the ECM can throw an errant code, particularly speed/timing sensors.
Wife's 2002 TT dies on road, and will crank, won't fire. I get there 20-30 minutes later, everything checks out, no obvious defects, she cranks it starts right away. we're three miles from home, drives home, and it dies on our lane. I grab my OBD tool, won't connect. about 20-30 minutes go by, and it connects, shows a P0322 code, and starts and we drive it to the house, I backed it into the garage and pull it onto a set of ramps.
Any idea if this is common? There is a relay that feeds the ECM, can it cause this issue. I am an old Cat mechanic, I have a preconceived notion that the power supply being cut to the ECM can throw an errant code, particularly speed/timing sensors.
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