Tony,
It's a disaster waiting to happen for sure. You can either decide to pull it all apart and clean it out to the best of your ability every 60-80k, but the problem there is how to clean out the black plastic inlet manifold runners, which head downwards after the EGR inlet. These will no doubt block up as well, and any sort of cleaner or residue can become fuel and upon starting you could have a run away situation. I cleaned mine with carb cleaner, let it air for hours, gave it a blow out with the compresser, yet still on starting the next morning it had a bit of a rev. Remember a diesel is throttled by fuel, so putting anything combustable ( including dislodging sludge ) can become like flooring the throttle.
My temporary solution is very illegal and I'm routing the Provent oil vapour into my exhaust. On driving you get a bit of heat into the exhaust and I figure it would burn off, but at idle, when the exhaust temps drop down to below 100 degrees ( amazing hey! ) you can definately smell oil fumes from my exhaust. Not badly so, but no doubt there. I actually turn the car off at the lights most of the time because I'm aware of this and how it may affect others.
I'm about to get the car chipped, and am hoping the tuner can turn off my EGR circuit as my plan is to remove the whole thing and put a plate right up at the exhaust manifold. This is going to raise my exhaust temps, but so too am I going to run a constant boost controlled / EGT controlled water meth system to drop the temps down, so it's going to be a trade off. I have an EGT gauge, and keep an eye on the stock temps, for in the end even if you do hobble your EGR system, all you need do is be aware of the EGT's when you floor it, and just minimise your time above 650-700 degrees C. Gale Banks and Bullydog, some of the major diesel tuners in the USA reckon 1250 -1350 degrees F is about the upper end of safe for any turbo for any sort of longevity.
There have been three 103kw turbo's go pop that I'm aware of, after tunes, but still I think you'd simply have to install a gauge, do all you can to get the inlet charge cool ( Cold Air Inlet, intercooler water spray, heat wrap the inlet ) and just drive to your EGT's.
There's certainly going to be a lot of TDI's having problems from sludge over coming years as they rack up the miles. Good you are thinking ahead!
Last edited by Greg Roles; 29-11-2009 at 09:30 AM.
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