Expansion-candidate manufacturer page
Audi P0010
Audi P0010 Code
Audi P0010 still points to the intake cam actuator control circuit, but the practical split is between wiring faults, a failed actuator or solenoid, and the smaller PCM branch.
- INDEX
- NOINDEX
- PARENT
- P0010
- MATRIX
- ROW FOUND
- DRIVE
- CAUTION
Quick answer
AI-CITATION READYWhat it means
Can you drive with it?
Most common causes
- Wiring damage, poor terminal contact, or an open intake cam actuator circuit is still the first branch to clear when P0010 sets.
- If the harness is intact, a failed intake cam actuator or control solenoid becomes the stronger Audi-backed branch.
- The PCM branch stays real but small and should come after the circuit and actuator have both been tested.
Typical repair cost
Start with the generic P0010 repair path, then narrow the decision using Audi-specific checks before replacing major parts.
Indexation guardrail
This page is published as a guarded manufacturer supplement. It canonicalizes back to the generic parent and stays out of the sitemap until the repo has both a matching manufacturer_codes row and approved indexation evidence for this exact pair within the active release lane.
01 / What changes here
The local Audi matrix for P0010 is intentionally narrow: PCM failure, variable valve timing actuator failure, and wiring issues are the supported branches. The manufacturer page should keep the work focused on proving the circuit and actuator path before making the control-module branch carry too much weight.
02 / Matrix evidence
Powertrain Control Module (PCM) failure, Variable valve timing actuator failure, Wiring issue
03 / Brand patterns
- Wiring damage, poor terminal contact, or an open intake cam actuator circuit is still the first branch to clear when P0010 sets.
- If the harness is intact, a failed intake cam actuator or control solenoid becomes the stronger Audi-backed branch.
- The PCM branch stays real but small and should come after the circuit and actuator have both been tested.
04 / Diagnostic starting points
- Inspect the intake cam actuator connector, harness routing, and terminal tension before ordering parts.
- Verify commanded output, power, ground, and circuit continuity to separate a wiring fault from a bad actuator or solenoid.
- Only after the circuit and actuator test correctly should the PCM branch move higher on the list.
05 / Vehicle-family notes
These are on-page notes only. No standalone model/year/engine pages are published or indexed from this wave.
Audi A4
- A4 searches usually need a clean split between a harness or connector issue and an intake cam actuator that has actually failed.
- Do the circuit checks first so the small PCM branch is not promoted before the actuator path is proven.
Audi A5
- A5 demand often centers on whether the intake cam control fault is electrical or whether the actuator itself is no longer responding.
- Use output tests and continuity checks before calling the module or the full timing system bad.
06 / When exact fitment matters
Audi intake cam control layouts, actuator packaging, and pinouts vary by engine family and model year. Use exact service information before condemning the actuator, wiring, or PCM from pattern evidence alone.
07 / Baseline parent page
Use the generic parent page for the full code definition, symptoms, repair table, and FAQ:
08 / Source notes
- Generic OBD2.help P0010 content for baseline actuator-circuit meaning and repair flow.
- Repo-backed matrix evidence is present via the AUDI manufacturer_codes row for P0010: PCM failure, variable valve timing actuator failure, and wiring issues.
09 / Source and method
- DATA BASIS
- OBD-II REFERENCE + OBD2.HELP
- METHOD
- STATIC VALIDATION
- SAFETY
- INFORMATIONAL
This page combines OBD-II diagnostic reference data with OBD2.help generated diagnostic guidance for code meaning, likely causes, and repair direction.
Publishing uses deterministic schema and build validation, plus manual spot checks on representative pages before release.
Safety-critical diagnosis and repairs should be confirmed with a qualified mechanic, especially when the vehicle is misfiring, overheating, or losing power.