
🔍 What Does P173F Mean?
P173F is a VAG / Audi-specific transmission fault code. In Audi S tronic / DSG context, it is commonly described as:
P173F — Valve 2 in Sub-Gearbox 1 / Transmission Part 1 — Electrical Fault
Several DSG/S tronic fault-code references list P173F as Valve 2 in sub-gearbox 1 electrical fault, and DSG service lists show it with symptom/DFCC code 8025 in the 0B5/DL501 family.
👉 In simple words:
The transmission control unit detects an electrical problem in the control circuit for Valve 2 on sub-gearbox 1.
That usually points to:
- mechatronic circuit board fault
- internal TCU/mechatronic electrical issue
- solenoid/valve 2 control circuit fault
- connector or internal harness problem
- sometimes complete mechatronic failure
⚙️ What “Sub-Gearbox 1” Means
Audi/VW dual-clutch gearboxes work like two gearboxes inside one casing:
- Sub-gearbox 1 / transmission part 1
- Sub-gearbox 2 / transmission part 2
The mechatronic unit controls both halves using hydraulic valves, solenoids, pressure regulation and internal electronics.
So:
- P173F = Valve 2 electrical fault in sub-gearbox 1
- related “part 2” code may appear on some gearbox families as a sister fault
For the Audi 0B5 / DL501 S tronic, quick-reference material lists P173F = Valve 2 in Transmission Part 1 – Electrical.
⚠️ How Serious Is P173F?
Severity: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ High / Critical
This is not a simple emissions code. P173F is a transmission mechatronic / valve electrical fault, and it can cause real drivability problems.
🚨 Why it matters:
- can trigger Gearbox malfunction warnings
- may cause limp mode
- can create harsh or delayed shifts
- can affect clutch and gear engagement
- may require TCU/mechatronic repair
- can become more expensive if ignored
Audi S tronic mechatronic fault references list symptoms such as limp-home mode, harsh gear changes and erratic gear selection when the mechatronic unit fails.
🚨 Common Symptoms of P173F
Typical symptoms include:
- ⚠️ Gearbox malfunction warning on dashboard
- ⚠️ PRNDS / transmission warning light
- ⚠️ harsh shifting
- ⚠️ delayed Drive or Reverse engagement
- ⚠️ limp mode / limited gears
- ⚠️ jerking or shudder when pulling away
- ⚠️ gearbox fault returns after clearing
- ⚠️ vehicle may not move in severe cases
Some DQ200/0AM references also list P173F as a partial transmission 1 valve 2 error where the vehicle may not be able to move and TCU replacement is often suggested in that specific gearbox family.
🧠 Most Common Causes of P173F
1️⃣ Mechatronic circuit board / TCU failure — most common
For Audi S tronic and VW DSG gearboxes, P173F is usually not about an external engine sensor. It is commonly linked to the mechatronic unit, TCU electronics, circuit board or internal solenoid control.
0B5/DL501 and DSG references list P173F in the mechatronic fault family, and repair specialists include it among common Audi S tronic mechatronic failures.
2️⃣ Valve 2 solenoid electrical fault
Because the code specifically points to Valve 2, the electrical fault can be in:
- solenoid coil
- valve control circuit
- internal mechatronic connection
- board-to-solenoid contact
- internal harness path
This is different from a mechanical valve-sticking code. P173F is primarily electrical.
3️⃣ Internal harness / connector issue
A damaged internal harness, poor contact, fluid contamination or connector problem can trigger the electrical fault.
Possible signs:
- intermittent fault at first
- worse when hot
- fault returns after clearing
- other valve electrical codes appear nearby
4️⃣ Broader mechatronic failure cluster
P173F can appear together with other Audi S tronic / DSG codes such as:
- P174A — Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 1 electrical fault
- P174B — Valve 4 in sub-gearbox 1 electrical fault
- P174C — Valve 1 / Valve 2 in sub-gearbox 2 electrical fault
- P174E — Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 2 electrical fault
- P174F — Valve 4 in sub-gearbox 2 electrical fault
- P179C — Main pressure valve electrical fault
- P179D — Cooling oil valve electrical fault
Audi S tronic repair references group these codes as part of the mechatronic fault pattern.
5️⃣ Wrong or damaged repair kit / incomplete adaptation
If the mechatronic has already been repaired, P173F can return if:
- wrong repair kit was used
- board contacts are still bad
- solenoid fault was not fixed
- adaptation/basic settings were not completed
- internal TCU is damaged beyond repair
6️⃣ Gearbox-family difference: 0B5 vs 0AM/DQ200 vs DQ381
Important: P173F can appear across different VAG DSG/S tronic families, but the repair direction can differ.
- 0B5 / DL501: often discussed as Valve 2 in Transmission Part 1 electrical fault.
- 0AM / 0CW / DQ200: listed as Partial transmission 1 Valve 2 error, often with TCU/mechatronic replacement guidance.
- 0GC / DQ381: some specialist references list P173F00 = valve 2 electrical malfunction in partial transmission 1.
So the article should say: always identify the exact gearbox type before ordering parts.
⚡ P173F vs P174A / P174B / P174C
| Code |
Meaning |
| P173F |
Valve 2 in sub-gearbox 1 — electrical fault |
| P174A |
Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 1 — electrical fault |
| P174B |
Valve 4 in sub-gearbox 1 — electrical fault |
| P174C |
Valve 1 / Valve 2 in sub-gearbox 2 — electrical fault, depending on source/gearbox |
| P174E |
Valve 3 in sub-gearbox 2 — electrical fault |
| P174F |
Valve 4 in sub-gearbox 2 — electrical fault |
👉 Simple explanation:
- P173F = Valve 2 electrical fault on side 1
- P174A = Valve 3 electrical fault on side 1
- P174B = Valve 4 electrical fault on side 1
This is useful for Google because users often search one code and compare it with the neighboring valve codes.
🔧 Step-by-Step Diagnosis
1️⃣ Scan with VCDS / ODIS, not only a generic scanner
For VAG transmission faults, generic scanners often miss important details.
Record:
- full DTC
- code suffix, such as P173F00
- symptom / DFCC code if available
- gearbox type
- static or intermittent status
- freeze-frame data
- related transmission codes
forum discussions repeatedly point users toward proper VCDS-style diagnosis and basic settings procedures when DSG fault codes are present.
2️⃣ Identify the exact gearbox
This is critical.
Check whether the car has:
- 0B5 / DL501 wet-clutch S tronic
- 0AM / 0CW DQ200 dry-clutch DSG
- 0GC / DQ381
- another VAG DSG/S tronic variant
Why this matters:
- same code family may have different part architecture
- repair kit may differ
- TCU may be separate or integrated
- adaptation procedure may differ
3️⃣ Check related codes
Look for:
- P174A
- P174B
- P174C
- P174E
- P174F
- P179C
- P179D
- P0726
- P1740
- P17D8
If several valve-electrical codes appear together, suspect a mechatronic circuit board / TCU failure, not one isolated valve.
4️⃣ Check when the fault appears
Note whether P173F appears:
- immediately after ignition
- only after driving
- only when hot
- after adaptation/basic settings
- after mechatronic repair
- after fluid service
Electrical faults that appear immediately often point more toward circuit/TCU/solenoid. Faults that appear hot may also involve thermal expansion/contact problems.
5️⃣ Inspect fluid and mechatronic service history
Even though P173F is electrical, bad fluid and previous repairs still matter.
Check:
- correct DSG/S tronic fluid
- correct level
- fluid contamination
- metal debris
- previous mechatronic repair
- previous board/TCU replacement
- whether adaptations were completed
6️⃣ Test/inspect the mechatronic electrical path
Depending on gearbox type, the repair path may include:
- mechatronic circuit board
- TCU
- internal harness
- solenoid/Valve 2 coil
- connector pins
- repair kit compatibility
For 0B5/DL501, repair references list circuit-board and mechatronic failures as common in this fault family.
7️⃣ Perform basic settings/adaptation after repair
After mechatronic or TCU repair, DSG/S tronic gearboxes often need:
- basic settings
- clutch adaptation
- selector/gear actuator adaptation
- road-test procedure
But adaptation is not a fix if the electrical fault remains.
🛠️ How to Fix P173F
✔️ Mechatronic / TCU repair
Most common repair direction for P173F, especially when the fault belongs to a cluster of valve-electrical codes.
💰 Typical cost: $700–$1,800+
✔️ Circuit board / internal connection repair
On Audi 0B5/DL501, circuit-board failure is a known mechatronic issue, and P173F belongs to the broader family of valve electrical faults.
💰 Typical cost: $800–$1,800+
Eco Torque describes 0B5/DL501 mechatronic circuit-board failure as a common issue in larger Audi models such as A4, A5, A6, A7, Q5 and RS variants.
✔️ Replace solenoid / valve 2 control component
If the solenoid coil or valve control path is confirmed faulty, targeted replacement may be possible depending on gearbox type.
💰 Typical cost: $500–$1,500+
✔️ Complete mechatronic replacement
If the TCU/mechatronic is too damaged or cannot be repaired reliably, replacement may be required.
💰 Typical cost: $1,500–$3,500+
✔️ DSG/S tronic fluid service + adaptation
Often required after repair.
💰 Typical cost: $250–$600
💰 Repair Cost Summary
| Repair |
Typical cost |
| VCDS / ODIS diagnosis |
$100–$250 |
| DSG/S tronic fluid service |
$250–$600 |
| Mechatronic / TCU repair |
$700–$1,800+ |
| Circuit board repair |
$800–$1,800+ |
| Solenoid / Valve 2 repair |
$500–$1,500+ |
| Complete mechatronic replacement |
$1,500–$3,500+ |
| Clutch/internal gearbox repair if damage exists |
$2,500–$6,000+ |
❗ Common Mistakes
❌ Treating P173F as a generic engine code
This is a VAG transmission mechatronic code, not a simple emissions fault.
❌ Replacing clutches first
P173F points first to electrical Valve 2 / mechatronic control, not directly to clutch wear.
❌ Ignoring gearbox type
P173F on 0B5 and P173F on DQ200 may require different repair parts and procedures.
❌ Doing adaptation only
Basic settings cannot fix a failed solenoid circuit, TCU or circuit board.
❌ Ignoring related codes
If P173F appears with P174A/P174B/P179C/P179D, the issue may be a broader mechatronic failure.
🚗 Can You Drive With P173F?
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:
- harsh shifts
- limp mode
- delayed Drive/Reverse
- PRNDS warning
- gearbox malfunction message
- repeated fault return
🚨 Risks of ignoring:
- more mechatronic damage
- no-drive condition
- clutch overheating
- gearbox limp mode
- higher repair cost
📌 Final Verdict
P173F usually means Valve 2 in sub-gearbox 1 has an electrical fault in the Audi/VAG DSG or S tronic mechatronic system.
Most common real causes:
- mechatronic circuit board failure
- TCU/internal electronics fault
- Valve 2 solenoid control circuit fault
- internal harness or connector fault
- broader DSG/S tronic mechatronic failure cluster
💡 Key takeaway:
- P173F = Valve 2 electrical fault on sub-gearbox 1
- P174A = Valve 3 electrical fault on sub-gearbox 1
- P174B = Valve 4 electrical fault on sub-gearbox 1
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