Home > Maintenance & Mods (L322) > 4.4 TDV8 EGR and DPF removal |
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jaguar3 Member Since: 25 Sep 2022 Location: Estonia Posts: 193 |
Partly you are right, diesel engine throttle valve stay always open. But, imagine you kick-down and accelerate with 3-th gear up to 120km/h or even more, up to 5000rpm and suddenly release accelerator pedal. What happend then? Gearbox swich to 8-th gear, engine prm drops to 1200. Both turbos still running with full speed. Where the compressed air can go? Yes, in cylinders, but with 1200rpm not much air can fit there. As a result - overpressure in intake (not so big as in petrol engines with closed throttle of course, but still). To avoid overpressure in this case, EGR open and release pressure in exhaust system. And this is not just theory, this action is mapped in ECU exactly for that reason. Another thing. You show very dirt intake. Thats the worst thing EGR do for sure, no questions. But how many miles car have? How old is it? I suppouse around 10000-150000 miles or even more and over 10 years old. And you will clean intake anyway. So, after cleaning you can drive again 10 years before you have the same issue again. Its not enough? Yes,if you plan to drive with this car 20 years or 500000miles, then there is a point. But usualy people not drive same car over 5 years. Then why just not to clean intake once and just forget about it for 10 years (if the main problem is only dirt intake)? Because the EGR it self is immortal on 4,4 and I never heard there is some issue with that (at least nobody still never change it). Old LR-s yes, they have lot of problems with EGR, they need to change it every apr. 3 years and thatwhy better to remove it. But not 4,4. I also open my intake and I didnt find its significaly dirty (135 000km). Just clean up MAP sensor, throttle valve and EGR intake pipe, thats it. And I can drive more same distance until I need to clean whole intake. I wannt, but I cannot find any reason why to remove it on 4,4? |
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4th Oct 2022 4:52pm |
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telly-addict Member Since: 22 Mar 2019 Location: Morayshire Posts: 138 |
Thanks for the input jaguar3. I see what you're saying and all completely valid points I think. What it comes down to, from my perspective at least, is the desire for the car to be running at its best and to provide an enjoyable driving experience. This is of course a very subjective thing for each of us, some like the idea of 'improving on LR's original design' in realistic approaches and can see both the benefits and drawbacks of doing so and of course some are happier to leave be and not disturb. I'm a pragmatic type quite accustomed to doing my own cost/benefit analysis in whatever area you care to mention.
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5th Oct 2022 11:35am |
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jaguar3 Member Since: 25 Sep 2022 Location: Estonia Posts: 193 |
Thanks for justified opinion protection.
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5th Oct 2022 12:41pm |
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telly-addict Member Since: 22 Mar 2019 Location: Morayshire Posts: 138 |
Not being facetious or implying you in any of my stereotyping jaguar3, just giving you my honest opinion while keeping a little humour for all reading the thread.
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5th Oct 2022 3:30pm |
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jaguar3 Member Since: 25 Sep 2022 Location: Estonia Posts: 193 |
Not agree about Air Cont comparsion. Its too simple separate system, not affecting anything. But EGR, here we talking about fuel burning process, heart of engine.
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5th Oct 2022 4:57pm |
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telly-addict Member Since: 22 Mar 2019 Location: Morayshire Posts: 138 |
Then we will have to agree to disagree, because for me it is not part of the heart of the engine or needed for the fuel burning process; it's there for us organics to breathe slightly less toxic air at the cost of engine performance/efficiency hence the Air Con analogy. So your point being and I'm paraphrasing here 'if it's not broke, don't fix it'? Well I contest that the inclusion of the EGR is breaking the potential of the engine and creates conditions that make a failure in one of the intake components inevitable. We recirculate oil vapour through the intake and then we add hot sooty gases to the mix creating a sticky, abrasive goo that destroys moving parts and clogs sensitive sensors. Remember all the swirl-flap failures that got ingested through various manufacturers' diesel engines? MAP sensors giving erroneous readings? Air flow disruptions interfering with inlet charge? Caused by that gunk. Not to mention the EGR valves themselves clogging up and sticking open or shut. In my case, as described fully earlier in this thread, I developed an EGR fault that was going to be a 'painful' fix so in my eyes it was a no-brainer to delete EGR in my upcoming remap. As a result, I have experienced only positive results in my driving since the modification. If your argument against this is that my LR may develop a fault later on down the line, you may as well predict that day will follow night... Cam 2011 TDV8 Vogue in Stornoway Grey |
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5th Oct 2022 5:56pm |
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jaguar3 Member Since: 25 Sep 2022 Location: Estonia Posts: 193 |
Ok, lets finish our discussion like that: until I dont have any issue with it I will not remove it for sure.
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5th Oct 2022 7:59pm |
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JayGee Member Since: 27 Jul 2021 Location: London Posts: 3193 |
What’s the actual mpg gain you are seeing? 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322) |
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6th Oct 2022 6:52am |
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kevinp Member Since: 28 Sep 2019 Location: Telford Posts: 1205 |
I don't know whether this is relevant to this topic, but when my engine is stone cold the throttle pick up is instant and clean and gradually gets more laboured as the engine warms up. Presumably the EGR isn't working until up to temperature?
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6th Oct 2022 9:05am |
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GraemeS Member Since: 06 Mar 2015 Location: Wagga area Posts: 2469 |
EGR isn't enabled until the engine gets up to a defined minimum temperature. I centainly notice that mine drives much better until it starts to warms-up but that could be partly because more fuel is probably being injected for the cold engine. |
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6th Oct 2022 9:59am |
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telly-addict Member Since: 22 Mar 2019 Location: Morayshire Posts: 138 |
Actually you're bob-on. Mine is like that all the time.
Last tank was 30.9 mpg average, verified through quantity of fuel at refill. This included a trip to Glasgow (300 miles of mixed A road/dual carriageway). This tank not so good at 26.7 but have seen a multitude of small trips (barely getting warm). Biggest difference I'd say is in the instantaneous mpg; if just in a line of traffic doing 50-60mph usually see 30-50mpg. Cam 2011 TDV8 Vogue in Stornoway Grey |
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6th Oct 2022 4:55pm |
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JayGee Member Since: 27 Jul 2021 Location: London Posts: 3193 |
I'm 30+ mpg average on tank fill vs trip and see similar instant mpg. The CCF instrument panel settings are 7% optimistic for mpg readout so fill to brim vs trip miles are the only accurate way to measure it unless you reset it like I did with the GAP IID tool. What was it before the EGR delete? 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322) |
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6th Oct 2022 5:05pm |
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telly-addict Member Since: 22 Mar 2019 Location: Morayshire Posts: 138 |
When I calculated it, the onboard was almost exactly correct. Yes I measure it properly; brimmed and trip reset each time. I was low to mid 20s before remap and EGR delete. Driving style; I like to get up to speed quickly and then try to keep it constant and avoid brakes as much as possible. Cam
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6th Oct 2022 5:39pm |
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JayGee Member Since: 27 Jul 2021 Location: London Posts: 3193 |
If it was low to mid 20's that's quite a gain 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322) |
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6th Oct 2022 6:24pm |
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