Quiksilver wrote:
Sorry for digging up old threads but...
After reading through this it appears that disconecting the MAF, AFC and EGR all make your Jeep work better. But throws a CEL.
My question is why would i disconnect the MAF if i have disconnected the EGR. I thought we where only disconnecting the MAF to disable the EGR. Surely if i disconnect the EGR anyway i can leave the MAF installed - does it not make sense that its a good thing for the computer to know how much air is coming into the engine?
If i plug the MAF in and disconnect the EGR i cant see it doing any harm?

Thoughts ?
If memory serves....
The MAF was only used for close-loop-control feedback to control the EGR. It had no impact on anything else. Unplugging the MAF would cause the EGR and EGR Air Flow Control Valve to park in their default position (EGR closed and EGR Air Flow Control Valve Open) - as if they weren't there.
I bought the wire harness kit to fix this but never used it. Instead I simply unplugged the MAF and plugged a Harbor Freight OBDII code reader into my port. The code reader would display the error code from the unplugged MAF 3 times and then clear the code automatically on the 4th read. The fault for this condition (MAF unplugged) only occurs once during engine start-up, so once the code was cleared automatically by the code reader you were good to go with your CEL. Any new faults during driving, if they occurred, would be displayed as normal (CEL would come on etc.). Of course, if you left the Harbor Freight code reader plugged in it would automatically clear any new faults automatically as described above. So if a real fault occurred and you wanted to keep the code from being cleard, you had to unplug the code reader before it cleared the fault. This was never a problem for me as I never had other faults (at least until right before I sold the CRD).
This code reader, by the way, was a small little device. It could be plugged directly into the port without a cable. It worked perfectly for this task.
All told - I replaced 3 EGR's and 2 EGR Air Flow Control Valves (all under warranty) before I started running the CRD with the MAF unplugged and the coder reader installed. After that, I never had another problem. I had just under 30k on the odometer before I started running it with the MAF unplugged. I believe the CRD had somewhere in the neighborhood of 80k+ when I sold it.