Ranger1 wrote:
II still find it difficult to fault DCX entirely for the EGR issue, given the poor quality, high sulfur fuel we have to use, the ridiculous EPA requirements that indirectly make EGR feedback a necessity
No. This is 100% a DC problem.
Volkswagen can make cars that meet the requirements, and have been doing so for years, and they have minimal problems.
The only real common problem that VW has with the EGR system is their tendacy to clog after tens of thousands (50 or 60 thousand) of miles on dirty fuel. Which is easy enough to prevent, either by adjusting your EGR parameters with a VAG-COM (still keeping them within spec and meeting EPA requirements, just adjusting different than stock) - AND/OR using cleaner fuel - like Biodiesel or high quality diesel - AND/OR using additives like PowerService to help keep your system clean.
But the VW problem is not a malfunction, so much as a maintenance issue. As if it clogs up you can clean it out reasonably easy (not SUPER easy, but not a major job either).
The DC CRD seems to have a faulty EGR that FAILS. It is not a "poor long term maintenance issue" - it is a "this thing freaking breaks after a few miles" issue.
That is a design or production issue. Maybe the design is OK and there was just a batch of bad EGR systems. Maybe the computer programming is off. Maybe it is just a bad design and needs to be improved.
I mean the things are failing at less than 10,000 miles. I personally think it was probably a bad batch... But maybe I am just hopeful, since I own a CRD.
