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Originally Posted by
brad
which makes no sense as (earlier suggested) European/UK city traffic is twice as congested as Sydney/Melbourne.
I think you will find that until very recently most euro diesels weren't fitted with a DPF. Same here in Oz, the 103Kw PD TDI engine wasn't fitted with a DPF, but the 125Kw version was (and straight away had DPF clogging issues if driven only in heavy traffic).
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Originally Posted by
bobski
hehe, I believe that is called an "apprentice service and tune"... The old quip was thats how they'd tune Ferarris because the owners were too worried to sink the welly.
Not so fast, bobski (no I mean it, literally). There is a big difference between the "italian tune" of the 70's and what is required to efficiently regenerate a modern VAG TDI engine's DPF.
For an "italian tune" the problem was a build up of deposits on the spark plugs and in the combustion chambers. The solution was to drive at high revs and lots of throttle to blast all the crap out so the engine runs properly afterwards.
A partially blocked DPF is a very different scenario, and to do a proper DPF regeneration requires a distinctly different technique, as flogging a TDI engine will actually produce MORE soot and make it harder for the regeneration to complete. The details are in your owner's manual (yes, that boring thing that hardly anyone reads).
IIRC it goes something like this : Drive with the engine revs steady at around 2,000 rpm, on a light, constant acclerator pedal (ie not high revs, not flat to the floor) for around 20 minutes or so. So this can only be done in light, flowing traffic, preferably on a highway or freeway. It is perfectly OK to use 3rd or 4th gear so that the road speed doesn't get you booked for speeding.
So DPF regeneration driving is nothing like some people seem to think (and definitely not an excuse to flog the crap out of your engine, in fact quite the opposite).
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Originally Posted by
bobski
Would be nice for the manufacturers or even the service dept to tell you about it though. You'd think it'd be a common enough occurance for them to want to avoid trips in under warranty.
There seems to be several factors :
Most people only talk to a salesperson before they buy their car. The salesperson (and the dealer and the manufacturer) has a real incentive NOT to tell you anything that may dissuade you from buying the car they are trying to sell you.
Some salespeople simply don't have the product knowledge to be able to tell a prospective customer all the information they need to know to make an informed buying decision.
Some service desk jockeys are only interested in making their life easy, not in going the hard yards to really help the customer (I refuse to deal with service people who have that sort of attitude).
Some customers don't read the owner's manual (or if they do,they don't seem able to absorb the info it contains).
It is just as well we have forums like this where people can find out the real facts
2017 MY18 Golf R 7.5 Wolfsburg wagon (boring white) delivered 21 Sep 2017, 2008 Octavia vRS wagon 2.0 TFSI 6M (bright yellow), 2006 T5 Transporter van 2.5 TDI 6M (gone but not forgotten).
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