@JamesD
Thank you for your informations
I registered here to contribute in discussions about the inline-six Diesel. I have a L494 Range Rover Sport with the D350 engine. Got it also 5 months ago and have 6000km on the clock.
since two weeks I am recording my drives with Torque app and an OBD dongle. It's genious: the Ingenium engine covers a lot of standard PID of the app so that I directly (on-the-fly) see the coolant temperature, DPF temperature, oil temperature and the exhaust gas temperature.
I wanted to see these figures during my drive to the office and back (15km one way. the half way is on Autobahn).
as soon as I am on the Autobahn (after ca. 3.5-4km) the CAT and DPF temperatures are going over 300 degrees.
I suppose that with over 300 degrees the passive regeneration is taking place (the old Lions did that with 250 degrees Celsius of DPF)
interesting is, that the CAT and DPF temperature are very stable and, as soon as the engine is warm, the temperatures are close to each other (deviation of 10 degrees on a level of 300 degrees).
for me that's the confirmation, that DPF and CAT are close-coupled to the engine. if you open the hood and look to your engine: on the left side you see the turbo and between the engine and cabin you see a "big box" covered it heat-sheets - personally I suppose there is the CAT including the DPF.
last week I changed to summer tyres and took a look under the car - there is nowhere a DPF, so I suppose it is in this "big box"
if you are interested, check my post on rrsport.co.uk
Link
enjoy the car and the engine!
the new Ingenium is simply great!
cheers
harisson Range Rover Sport HST D350
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