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P174A is a VAG / Audi-specific transmission fault code, most commonly linked to the Audi 0B5 / DL501 7-speed S tronic gearbox.
The common meaning is:
P174A — Valve 3 in the sub-gearbox 1, electric fault
Common symptom code: 8939
Audi technical bulletins and 0B5 repair references list P174A exactly as Valve 3 in the sub-gearbox 1, electric fault, with symptom code 8939.
The transmission control unit detects an electrical fault in the control path for Valve 3 on sub-gearbox 1.
That usually means:
The 0B5 / DL501 S tronic is a dual-clutch transmission. Internally, it works like two gearboxes inside one case:
Each side has its own hydraulic and clutch control functions through the mechatronic unit.
So:
0B5 quick-reference material lists P174A = Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 1 electrical fault / 8939 and P174E = Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 2 electrical fault / 8940.
Severity: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ High / Critical
This is not a minor check-engine code. P174A usually belongs to the Audi 0B5 mechatronic failure family, and Audi bulletins group it with other serious S tronic faults such as:
Audi TSB material says the DTC and symptom code must match exactly before following the bulletin repair path, which shows how specific and serious this fault family is.
Typical symptoms include:
Specialist 0B5 repair references list P174A among common S tronic mechatronic fault codes associated with gearbox malfunction and mechatronic repair.
This is the biggest one.
Audi TSBs and 0B5 quick-reference sources repeatedly point P174A toward the mechatronic circuit board / printed circuit foil / connection board repair path. The quick-reference table lists P174A with the repair note “Replace Circuit Board.”
Audi technical background for this fault family describes internal contact-area problems in the mechatronic circuit board. That is why the fix is often not an external harness repair, but mechatronic circuit-board replacement.
The code is specifically about Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 1. If the circuit controlling that valve fails electrically, the TCM cannot command it correctly.
Possible causes:
P174A often appears together with codes like:
Audi TSBs and repair-kit listings group these codes together in the same 0B5 repair family.
Some repair kits are designed specifically for this fault family. ShopDAP lists P174A / 8939 among codes covered by an Audi 7-speed DSG mechatronic repair kit.
If the wrong kit is used, the repair is incomplete, or adaptation is not performed correctly after repair, the code can return.
These two are related but not the same.
Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 1 — electrical fault
Valve 3 in transmission part 1 — mechanical malfunction
This distinction matters because P174A is more strongly tied to circuit board replacement, while P17D4 is more about mechanical valve sticking or hydraulic malfunction.
Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 1 — electrical fault
Symptom code: 8939
Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 2 — electrical fault
Symptom code: 8940
Both codes are commonly listed together in Audi TSBs and 0B5 repair-kit references, and both usually point toward the mechatronic circuit board / connection-board repair path.
Do not rely only on a generic scanner.
Record:
For this fault, the key match is usually:
Audi bulletins specifically warn that fault codes and symptom codes must match exactly before following the TSB repair path.
Look for:
If multiple codes appear together, suspect a broader mechatronic board / connection fault, not one isolated solenoid.
During a careful road test, note:
This helps decide whether the issue is only electrical or has already caused hydraulic/clutch behavior problems.
Even though P174A is electrical, fluid condition still matters because the mechatronic lives inside the transmission environment.
Check:
Bad fluid may not directly cause P174A, but it can worsen mechatronic and hydraulic symptoms.
If P174A / 8939 is confirmed, the repair path commonly moves toward:
0B5 quick-reference and repair-kit sources repeatedly list Replace Circuit Board for P174A.
After mechatronic board repair or replacement, proper basic settings/adaptation are usually required using VCDS/ODIS.
But adaptation alone is not a fix if the circuit board fault is still present.
This is the most common documented fix path.
Audi-related quick-reference material lists P174A / 8939 → Replace Circuit Board.
💰 Typical cost: $800–$1,800+
Repair kits for the 0B5/DL501 mechatronic commonly include connection boards/circuit boards and are marketed for codes including P174A and P174E.
💰 Typical cost: $700–$1,800+ installed
If the board repair is not possible, the mechatronic is damaged, or multiple faults return, full mechatronic replacement may be needed.
💰 Typical cost: $1,500–$3,500+
Less common than internal board failure, but still possible if the fault is outside the mechatronic.
💰 Typical cost: $100–$500+
Usually done after mechatronic work.
💰 Typical cost: $250–$600
| Repair | Typical cost |
|---|---|
| VCDS / ODIS diagnosis | $100–$250 |
| S tronic fluid service | $250–$600 |
| Mechatronic circuit board repair | $800–$1,800+ |
| Mechatronic repair kit installed | $700–$1,800+ |
| Complete mechatronic replacement | $1,500–$3,500+ |
| Clutch / internal gearbox repair if damage exists | $2,500–$6,000+ |
P174A is electrical. P17D4 is mechanical. The repair direction can be different.
If the fault returns, the mechatronic control problem is still there.
P174A points first to the mechatronic electrical / circuit-board side, not directly to clutch wear.
Audi TSBs warn that the DTC and symptom code must match exactly before following the bulletin repair path.
Adaptation cannot repair a failing circuit board.
Only short-term and gently.
If the car still drives, you may be able to move it to a workshop. But normal driving is risky if there are:
P174A usually means Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 1 has an electrical fault inside the Audi 0B5 / DL501 S tronic mechatronic system.
Most common real causes: