Recently I came across a project that I simply could not pass up. I got my hands on a 2002 Audi A4 with a clean body, no rust, and even a pretty good quality interior. The catch of course was that the engine was in a crank no start condition.
I was hoping it would be an easy fix, but compression tests revealed zero compression on all four cylinders, which is generally a bad sign. I pulled the head off and found the piston tops had actually melted away and the entire engine was pretty much a total loss.
Inside of Cylinder 4
Engine with cylinder head off.
I sat on it for a while, unsure what I wanted to do, but slowly a plan came together. The LS swap seemed hopeless at first because of size constraints. Going from a 1.8 Liter inline 4 to a 5.3 liter v8 seems impossible, but there are some important things to consider. The main concern I had was width, but the B6 Audi could have come with a quad cam V6, which is actually wider than the LS. The other concern is obviously length. While the LS is obviously longer than the 1.8 liter, the 4l60e transmission that I will be using is actually much shorter than the Audi's AWD transmission, so the overall engine and trans combined length is about the same.
With the measurements on my side, I got to work tearing the old engine and trans out. It seems like a daunting task on a car like an Audi, but its really easy. The entire front of the car comes off, and then the engine and trans just slide out the front as a unit. Some of the Audi electronic control systems will be left in place, so for now I kept all the wires. I will trim back the ones I don't need later, and also add connectors to bridge the Chevy harness to it.
Engine stripped of all accessories and ready to come out. Its so small without all the junk around it!
Empty engine bay with the "new" LS next to it. It looks like it won't fit but I promise that once I strip all the junk off the new engine it will be perfect.
Next up, I remove the accessories from my new engine and find that both it and the transmission maybe were not the great deal I thought they were. Also, wiring harness work.