Hello together, we have some trouble with our Touran (2nd Gen.). A little over 2 weeks ago suddenly the exhaust gas control lights up and since our VW man was only 200 meters away directly and let the error memory read out. After a few minutes then the Job’s message, control chain broken, must be exchanged. Luckily there is culant of VW and thus we had to pay only about 40% wage costs, at least still about 400 euros. I picked up the car then and last week Saturday, so we had to pay about 40% wage costs. 1.5 days after pickup, again the fault light (was on the highway), directly slowed down my ride and to the next parking lot, the VW hotline called and then was towed 1.5 hours later. Well, diagnosis now turbocharger defective, cost approx. 2000 Euro, no culant. Control chain and turbocharger have nothing to do with each other in my opinion, but is already strange that after successful repair and about 90 km the next engine part flies around my ears. Well, we nn it would have been a 200 Euro thing now, then ok, but 2000 Euro, but hello. Stupidly, the Touran is of course not with my local VW people but about 50 km away. The workshop that has diagnosed the turbocharger error would like to repair and take care of the previous repairs nothing, since not there made – I understand. The workshop here in the village also does not take care of anything and says can have been broken before. Well, since it would have been a 200 Euro thing now, then ok, but 2000 Euro, but hello. Do you have an idea what you can do? Let an expert look at whether my home VW man did something wrong? Need the car quickly back as soon as the holiday is over. It’s interesting that the workshop where the Touran is at the moment said that the camshaft (?) was lost by 30 degrees (?) and actually from 28 degrees the engine would have to be broken anyway. Unfortunately, I didn’t understand what he meant by that. I just said that the steering wheel Technical data: VW Touran 2. Gen. (11/2008) approx.82.000 km 140 hp with DSG Thank you for your help and tips. Best regards, Thomas