The conclusion is that all is well…
Long story short, the app (Car Scanner) that I was using was showing corrected peak boost pressures. In other words it was correctly deducting atmospheric. I thought it wasn’t, so was subtracting 14.5 PSI (ish).
The reason why I thought it wasn’t deducting atmospheric:
- With a brand new Rev G fitted, it showed ~34 PSI peak (and was briefly crazy fast). I read this as 20 PSI.
- After the first drive it started showing ~24 PSI peak (and was much slower). I read this as 10 PSI.
What I think happened is that the boost spiked massively after fitting the new Rev G diverter valve. This was a one-off. Maybe because the battery had been disconnected and all of the adaptations had been lost. That was enough to register on the app. It settled down to a much more normal level for a Stage 1 car after a little while.
I had VCDS delivered yesterday. With logging it was boosting to 20 PSI, with specified and actual matching very closely. In other words, there are (now) no issues at all.
Lessons learned:
- My old Rev C was probably fine.
- You may get a one-off spike with a new diverter valve/battery reset. If you do, it will be fun.
- Car Scanner reports corrected values. Not with perfect accuracy, but for £5 or so quite useful. Probably good enough to tell you if you have a significant boost leak (and whether you need to replace your DV).
- VCDS not offering a mobile app for £225 is ridiculous (sorry, it’s 2022… a laptop on the passenger seat makes no sense). And no, a WiFi web interface for £430 does not count…
Hopefully this is useful to someone. Got there in the end.
Thanks for all the help.