wodmeup wrote:
So we decided to take the JEEP to a mechanic because I simply don't have more than 45 minutes a day to look at it. Soooo, the diesel mechanic tells me that my engine is shot. He says it has excessive blow-by and that the EGR is stuck open. He isn't sure as of right now whether or not the EGR is stuck open because the computer is telling it to be or not. He says that when the engine is running, and the oil fill cap is off, oil will actually sputter and shoot out of the filler neck high enough to get small droplets on the hood. I do know that the oil level is a little high, but not so much that the dipstick says anything alarming. He thinks I should take it off of the road. Easy to do because we haven't even had a plate on it yet. At this point I am wondering if we have spent $14,000 on a $9000 Jeep that now needs over $5000 in engine repairs...
If you guys have any more insights, I need help very badly!
Get another mechanic, yours is a moron who only THINKS he knows diesels. This isn't a 3500 psi indirect injection non-turbocharged diesel bulldozer. It is a precision machine with EXTREMELY high cylinder pressures.
My CRD does exactly the same oil-cap-spattering nonsense, and so have several others when I have been dumb and forgotten that they do that. It isn't excessive blowby, it is normal for this engine.
It also has NOTHING TO DO WITH THE EGR FUNCTION, so the genius might be partly correct about the EGR being stuck open... But I wouldn't trust that one if he told me tomorrow the sun would rise in the East and be yellow.
You can deal (at least temporarily) with the EGR by removing the EGR pipe on the intake side (it is in the most convenient place possible, UNDER the intake elbow)

and plug the intake elbow with a fat rubber plug. You will need to remove the intake elbow too, in order to seal it, and then wrap a big hose clamp around the entire elbow to hold the rubber in place against the intake boost pressure. Give it a drive, and see how it feels. I would also start the engine before putting the intake elbow back on, and feel (with a leather glove) if there is heat / pressure coming through the EGR outlet - That would indicate your leaking EGR for you, and it will need to be dealt with.
The preferred method is removal entirely, blocking off BOTH ends of the tubing where they attach to the exhaust and intake manifolds, and use of an SEGR and / or a GDE tune. Otherwise, you are looking at about a 6-7 hour labor bill and the overpriced cost of the EGR valve... And it will only last about 20k miles until failing again. If you *really must* replace the EGR with another functional unit, I have 2 that I would be happy to sell - both should be functional, because I did not have an EGR code on my CRD when I bought it, and I installed the SEGR before the first week was over. It was never used again. The second arrived with my replacement engine... And was never used either.