Frozen door locks, doors won't close
I've sprayed a ton of silicon lube (Jig-A-Loo) into the key hole and I've removed the driver side door card, trying to spray the entire mechanism as best I could. It seems the only thing that works is to wait for the door to warm up (15+ minutes with heat full blast.) To me this is unacceptable.
I know this is an all too common issue with many VW/Audi cars, but I'd like to know if there are any suggestions for resolving this annoying issue. Are there any penetrating oils or lubes that would work any better? Would replacing the lock mechanism improve things?
It's not even really cold outside yet, and I'm forced to drive around with bungie cords and my passengers holding my doors! Help!
thanks,
danzero
In my golf, I had a clogged drain in the so I was carrying around water in the door. Being in Virginia at the time, it got cold at night but warm enough during the day to have evaporation, condensation in the door. Stuck lock followed.
Good luck
I've sprayed a ton of silicon lube (Jig-A-Loo) into the key hole and I've removed the driver side door card, trying to spray the entire mechanism as best I could. It seems the only thing that works is to wait for the door to warm up (15+ minutes with heat full blast.) To me this is unacceptable.
I know this is an all too common issue with many VW/Audi cars, but I'd like to know if there are any suggestions for resolving this annoying issue. Are there any penetrating oils or lubes that would work any better? Would replacing the lock mechanism improve things?
It's not even really cold outside yet, and I'm forced to drive around with bungie cords and my passengers holding my doors! Help!
thanks,
danzero
In my golf, I had a clogged drain in the so I was carrying around water in the door. Being in Virginia at the time, it got cold at night but warm enough during the day to have evaporation, condensation in the door. Stuck lock followed.
Good luck
This looks like the right way to go! Door drains are key not only to avoid rust/rot, but for making sure that your door internals will function properly and continue to function.
Your problem sounds like it's in the latch. There's a U shaped piece of metal that's supposed to swing when it hits the door frame pin. Spray the mechanism with penetrating oil and work the U shaped piece with a Phillips head screwdriver. I sprayed from inside the door and sprayed toward the latch pin from the outside. After a while it should start moving freely. I find that an aerosol can with a small red tube to be handy.
After everything is working, squirt everything with real oil and work it a bunch of times to work the oil into the pivots. Penetrating oils will free up mechanisms but don't lubricate for long. You might want to finish it off with white lithium grease in a aerosol can.








