stevesmith7 wrote:
Turbo Tim wrote:
For the EGR (Exhaust Gas Recirculator) to work there has to be a vacuum on the intake so the engine can suck in the exhaust. On a diesel, there is no vacuum, in fact, with the turbo pushing air down the intake, the EGR by itself won't work. So, what some clever engineer did to make it work was to add this AFC valve on the entry point of the intake manifold. Now when the engine CPU says to add EGR, this valve closes part way (choking the engine), thus creating a vacuum so the EGR valve can dump exhaust in right behind this valve.
So thinking out loud here. Would it be possible to get the benifits of no EGR just by defeating the AFC? No vacuum, little to no exhaust gas in intake.
Simple solutions are best.
Steve
Indeed. The KISS method appeals to me, too. The big question in that regard is if the EGR will throw trouble codes if it doesn't actuate or if it WILL actuate and just do a really BAD job
TT, you mentioned that with the traditional ORM in place, there was still small voltages across the FCM and EGR. In your oppinion, were these just control signals polling the devices or were they actuating to some degree? i.e. was the FCV actuating even though the MAF was unplugged. Was the "unplug everything and lay rubber" what occurs if your REALLY shut off the egr? Ideally, I'd actually like the FCV to operate in engine shutdown, just not along with the egr. I suppose there's always the TCM P/N sense pin.
Man, would I love a brick that plugs inline to the harness right at the ECM and "edits" the signals (as opposed to the mid-wire solution).... it could even have a manual bypass for on-road lab-abidedness

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2005 Silver CRD Limited

245/75R16 GoodYear Duratracs
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