So as mentioned before, my previous A3 had a crank no start symptom with zero fault codes. It seemed like that's where this was headed so I spent a few minutes pulling off the intake side to look at the impeller.
Here's what it looked like on my old one:
Here's what it looked like on this new car:
So the good news is the turbo is in okay shape. There's a little shaft play but for now this is a functional part. The bad news is the fuel system appears to be the problem. Reading up on any TDI high pressure fuel pump replacement will scare the E36 M3 out of you. Thousands of dollars to essentially replace EVERY SINGLE FUEL RELATED ITEM.
My OBD Eleven reader shows only 8 bar while cranking for the HPFP. That's frickin scary. Really fricking scary.
First thing to check is the fuel filter. Super easy to access and should have lots of metal flakes in it if the HPFP is going bad. Didn't snap pics because covered in diesel fuel but newly clean filter with no metal particles in it. That's a good sign.
Then I pulled the Fuel Metering Valve to find zero metal swarf. This is another great sign!
Then I pulled the in tank fuel transfer pump under the rear seat. There was some metal debris in the basket, but a very small amount. Nothing large or alarming. Still not giving me a warm fuzzy feeling. After cleaning it up really well I tested to make sure it was still functional. The pump still hums away beautifully. So it went back in the tank for now. Later I will drain the complete tank to clean any possible debris leftover. Currently it is filled to the brim.
I also tested to make sure fuel was flowing out of the supplementary fuel pump that feeds the filter. Didn't get a great look at the flow rate but it filled up my container with ease.
I'm still feeling like this could be a high pressure fuel pump since there have been others tinkering on this car before me. The mechanic that worked on it gave up or the guy who owned it couldn't afford to figure it out. So maybe they were a shop that fires the parts cannon at it or just didn't want to mess with it? I have his address and am planning to reach out. Maybe he is willing to expand how things transpired.
Anyway I saw a DIY on how to open up the pump for inspection without removing the timing belt. Again no pics with any of this stuff because everything just is caked in fuel. After popping it open I was greeted with a beautiful pump internally. No scarring, marring, metal bits, worn surfaces, it was glorious. I was certain to keep everything clean when reassembling as well as getting the piston in the correct orientation. On to the next.
Now I have a few things to consider. The injectors are clogged up or one is bleeding off due to the way they are designed which will not allow the rail to achieve pressure. Another option is the fuel pressure regulating valve could have failed or is clogged.
I think I want to pull the injectors and try cleaning them? Rebuilt Bosche units are around $300 PER INJECTOR! So it could be around $1200 for the injectors which isn't too far off from where I had hoped to be. I figure it's worth a shot trying to clean the ones I have or figure out how to test if it's just one taking a E36 M3. I really just want to know for certain before spending money.