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P176B is a VAG / Audi-specific transmission fault code commonly found on Audi vehicles with the 0B5 / DL501 7-speed S tronic gearbox.
The common meaning is:
P176B — Gear Selector 2 Cannot Be Regulated
Also described as: Gear Actuator / Selector 2 Not Adjustable
Common 0B5 reference number: 8090
0B5 quick-reference material lists P176B = Gear Selector 2 Cannot be Regulated / 8090, with repair direction often pointing toward a mechatronic repair kit.
The transmission control unit is trying to move or regulate Gear Selector 2, but it cannot control it within the expected range.
That usually means a problem with:
Audi S tronic / DSG gearboxes use a mechatronic unit to control gear selection and clutch engagement. The TCU commands hydraulic/electromechanical actuators to select gears, regulate selector position and control the dual clutches.
When Gear Selector 2 cannot be regulated, the transmission may not be able to select or hold the gear path controlled by selector 2. This can cause missing gears, no reverse on some gearbox families, harsh shifting, limp mode or a gearbox malfunction warning.
Specialist Audi 0B5 repair references list P176B in the same mechatronic failure group as P176A, P176C, P176D, P17D6, P17D7, P179C and P179D.
Severity: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Critical
P176B is a serious transmission fault, not a basic engine/emissions code.
A real owner report described P176B causing loss of all even gears and reverse on a VAG DSG application, while still allowing limited driving. This shows how severe selector regulation faults can become.
Typical symptoms include:
| Symptom | What it may suggest |
|---|---|
| No reverse / missing gear group | selector 2 cannot reach or hold position |
| Harsh R-N-D engagement | selector / mechatronic hydraulic issue |
| P176B + P176A | broader selector regulation fault |
| P176B + P17D7 | clutch pressure problem nearby |
| P176B after repair | adaptation, fluid level, voltage, coding or repair-kit issue |
| Only shifts up to 2nd on DQ200 | software/mechatronic strategy should be checked |
For DQ200 specifically, a 2025 specialist article notes that P176B / Gear Actuator 2 Not Adjustable is not always mechanical and may sometimes be software-related, so gearbox type matters.
The code says Gear Selector 2 Cannot Be Regulated, so the most direct fault area is the selector-control system.
Possible causes:
Audi S tronic specialists list P176B — Selector 2 Cannot Be Regulated / Gear Actuator 2 Not Adjustable among common 0B5 mechatronic failure codes.
Eco Torque describes 0B5 / DL501 circuit board failure as a common issue on larger Audi models and lists P176B — Gear Selector 2 Cannot be Regulated among the fault codes associated with that failure family.
However, P176B should not be treated as only a circuit-board fault. It is a selector regulation code, so the hydraulic section, selector mechanics, clutch condition and adaptation also matter.
Some S tronic specialist sources discussing P176A/P176B-type selector regulation faults state that in many cases the root cause can be clutch basket wear/damage and the hydraulic part of the mechatronic, not just friction discs.
This is important because replacing only the wrong part can make the fault return.
The 0B5/DL501 gearbox is sensitive to correct fluid type, level and fill temperature.
Fluid-related issues can cause:
This is especially relevant if P176B appeared after:
After repairs, battery issues, mechatronic work or clutch replacement, the gearbox may need proper basic settings/adaptation.
If adaptation fails specifically on selector 2, P176B may return. But adaptation alone will not fix a physically worn clutch basket, hydraulic failure or damaged selector mechanism.
Selector regulation and basic settings require stable voltage. If the battery is weak or coding is wrong after mechatronic replacement, selector faults can appear or adaptation may fail.
Check:
P176B can appear across different VAG DSG/S tronic families, but the repair direction can differ.
Always identify the exact gearbox before ordering parts.
Gear Selector 1 Cannot Be Regulated.
Gear Selector 2 Cannot Be Regulated.
0B5/DL501 repair references list both as selector regulation faults in the same family.
Do not rely only on a generic scanner.
Record:
For P176B, the key wording is usually Gear Selector 2 Cannot Be Regulated / 8090.
Look for:
If multiple selector/pressure/mechatronic faults appear together, suspect a broader 0B5 mechatronic or clutch/hydraulic issue.
Before ordering parts, confirm:
This matters because P176B repair direction differs by gearbox family.
Before adaptation:
Low voltage can cause misleading selector/adaptation failures.
Check:
If P176B appeared after repair or service, this step is critical.
Basic settings/adaptation should be attempted only when:
If selector 2 cannot complete basic settings, suspect mechatronic/selector/clutch/hydraulic issues.
With VCDS/ODIS or specialist tools, check:
If the gearbox loses a gear group or reverse, selector regulation fault becomes much more serious.
If P176B returns after voltage, fluid and adaptation are correct, the main repair area becomes:
If the fault appeared after repair or low battery, fix the basics first.
💰 Typical cost: $50–$300+
If fluid level or fill procedure is wrong, correct it before replacing parts.
💰 Typical cost: $150–$500+
0B5 quick-reference material lists P176B / 8090 with repair direction Repair with mechatronic repair kit.
💰 Typical cost: $800–$2,000+
If selector regulation failure is hydraulic, a rebuild may be required.
💰 Typical cost: $900–$2,500+
If clutch basket wear or clutch damage is the root cause, mechatronic-only repair may not last.
💰 Typical cost: $1,200–$3,500+
Needed if the unit is too damaged or repair/adaptation cannot be completed reliably.
💰 Typical cost: $1,500–$3,500+
For some DQ200 P176B cases, a specialist notes software may be the root cause and parts replacement may not always be needed.
💰 Typical cost: $100–$400+
If selector mechanism or internal gearbox damage is present.
💰 Typical cost: $2,500–$6,000+
| Repair | Typical cost |
|---|---|
| VCDS / ODIS diagnosis | $100–$250 |
| Battery / voltage / coding correction | $50–$300+ |
| Fluid level correction + adaptation | $150–$500+ |
| DSG / S tronic fluid service | $250–$600 |
| Software update / calibration check | $100–$400+ |
| Mechatronic repair kit | $800–$2,000+ |
| Mechatronic rebuild | $900–$2,500+ |
| Clutch basket / clutch pack repair | $1,200–$3,500+ |
| Complete mechatronic replacement | $1,500–$3,500+ |
| Internal gearbox repair | $2,500–$6,000+ |
They are related, but selector 1 and selector 2 may affect different gear groups or symptoms.
Specialist sources warn that on P176A/P176B-type faults, the clutch basket/hydraulic part may be the real issue, not only friction plates.
P176B on 0B5/DL501 and P176B on DQ200 can have different root causes and repair paths.
A bad voltage condition can make selector regulation look worse than it is.
Audi/VAG DSG faults need VCDS/ODIS-level data.
Harsh launches, towing, or aggressive driving can overheat clutches and worsen selector/mechatronic damage.
Only short-term and gently.
If the vehicle still drives, it may be possible to move it to a workshop. But normal driving is risky if there are:
P176B usually means Gear Selector 2 cannot be regulated inside the Audi/VAG DSG or S tronic gearbox.
Most common real causes: