The difference in one line
A variable nozzle turbo (VNT, also called VGT) has movable vanes around the turbine wheel that change the effective housing size; a fixed geometry turbo has a wastegate that bleeds excess exhaust gas to limit boost.
Why VNTs took over diesel
A small turbo gives quick response at low RPM but runs out of air at high RPM. A big turbo gives high top-end boost but suffers from lag at low RPM. A VNT does both: at low RPM the vanes close to a small effective housing for quick spool; at high RPM they open to a large effective housing for high flow. Almost every European diesel built since 2002 uses a VNT.
Why fixed geometry survived in petrol turbos
Petrol exhaust runs much hotter (~900°C+) than diesel exhaust (~600-750°C). VNT vane mechanisms warp and seize at petrol temperatures. Fixed geometry wastegate turbos are the standard on turbo petrol engines. Recent ceramic-coated VNTs are starting to appear on petrol engines but remain rare.
Common VNT failures
- Vanes seize in one position from soot buildup — gives loss of power or overboost
- Vane actuator linkage wears or breaks — boost out of control
- Electronic VNT actuator motor fails — usually limp mode and fault code
- Vacuum actuator diaphragm splits — soft boost or no boost
Common fixed-geometry failures
- Wastegate flapper sticking — overboost or limp mode
- Wastegate diaphragm split — no boost control
- Wastegate spring weak — boost creep
Which is cheaper to recondition?
Fixed geometry is generally cheaper because there is no vane mechanism to overhaul. VNT reconditioning adds £80-£150 for vane stripping, cleaning, and clearance setting. The trade-off is that VNT performance wins on a healthy unit.
How to know which yours is
Look at the turbo model code: codes containing “V” or “VNT” (eg GT17V, GT20V, GTB1749V) are variable geometry. Codes without V (eg GT15, T25, K03) are fixed geometry with wastegate. Or check the actuator on the turbine housing: VNTs have a rod connected to a circular vane ring; fixed-geometry has a rod connected to a flap valve in the turbine housing.