A4, A5 & TT: hydraulic ram seals and the lopsided roof
Slow · uneven · getting worseHow it shows up
The roof takes a little longer every summer, then one side starts leading the other — the classic lopsided lift. You might find a tide-mark of hydraulic fluid behind the rear seats or in the well where the roof stows. Left long enough, the weaker cylinder gives up entirely and the roof stops mid-cycle, usually on the first warm weekend you actually wanted it down.
Why it gets misread
A lopsided roof looks mechanical, so generalists reach for "bent frame" and quote accordingly — or swap the pump, which was never the problem. The dealer path is complete replacement rams at serious money. And topping up the reservoir, the internet's favourite remedy, only masks the symptom while the seals keep weeping into your trim.
How we repair it
We pressure-test the system to identify exactly which cylinder is bleeding pressure, then rebuild it: strip, new seals, pressure-test, refit. The lines and pump are inspected while access is open, the system gets flushed and bled, and the roof is cycle-tested until both sides move as one. Your own rams, back to spec, under our workmanship warranty.