camo wrote:
geordi wrote:
Yes, but you will get a CEL for it. The MAF sensor is needed by the nanny system to detect whether the EGR has opened or not, as the electric actuator has no feedback indicator. As such, if the MAF is "not working" then the engine cannot correctly determine EGR operation, so defaults to not using it at all.
got it. so will the ecm still detect high or low boost situations?
It should - That is controlled entirely by the MAP sensor located on the back of the intake, under a 4mm hex socket cap screw. If (when) that MAP gets filled with filthy gunk from the combination of CCV oil (do the EHM to fix) and EGR soot (ORM, SEGR, or GDE Eco-tune to fix) you end up with a wonderful carbon-based MUD that just coats everything in sticky filth.
As the MAP is a pressure-based sensor, you can imagine how being completely insulated in gook would prevent proper readings. The downside to this (assuming all else is working properly) is that your turbo can actually be OVERBOOSTING, which is the same as over-speeding!
This is NOT something to ignore. I have had now two turbo failures, of the stock design and NOT being driven excessively hard. I have an EGT gauge and boost gauge (after the first failure) so I know that this second unit has been treated properly. It failed with approximately 112k miles on it, by developing a wobble and striking the housing... Causing an oil leak that thankfully I caught before it did anything catastrophic.
I do not trust this choice of turbo, but it is what we are all stuck with. So running the turbo, the ONLY things regulating the speed / boost are the MAP sensor and the vacuum controller solenoid on the passenger side of the engine. Keep that MAP sensor clean, and I would strongly suggest a boost gauge for backup - NOT connected to the computer. If you see boost above 25 - That is BAD and indicates a problem in either the sensor or the controller.