Bland by name
New Member
- Posts
- 1
Hi,
Removed the EGR yesterday and did it in a slightly different way, I haven't seen anyone do it like this before and think that there are a number of benefits, but would appreciate your thoughts.
I left in place the exhaust pipework into the heat exchanger and simply blanked the outlet. There are a number of advantages to this.
1: Don't need to remove the potentially tricky bolts that go into the exhaust manifold, and the risk of snapping.
2: As the EGR itself is hidden under the engine cover the only way to spot its removal is by spotting the removed exhaust feed, so it is much harder to spot in a MOT.
3: You don't need the extra blanks so can buy the slightly cheaper kit.
However... I can't work out what the outlet midway along the heat exchanger does, but I figure that it must be pressurised when the EGR is shut so it is fine for it to be permanentlypressurised. Would appreciate any thoughts on this aspect in particular!
Thanks
Removed the EGR yesterday and did it in a slightly different way, I haven't seen anyone do it like this before and think that there are a number of benefits, but would appreciate your thoughts.
I left in place the exhaust pipework into the heat exchanger and simply blanked the outlet. There are a number of advantages to this.
1: Don't need to remove the potentially tricky bolts that go into the exhaust manifold, and the risk of snapping.
2: As the EGR itself is hidden under the engine cover the only way to spot its removal is by spotting the removed exhaust feed, so it is much harder to spot in a MOT.
3: You don't need the extra blanks so can buy the slightly cheaper kit.
However... I can't work out what the outlet midway along the heat exchanger does, but I figure that it must be pressurised when the EGR is shut so it is fine for it to be permanentlypressurised. Would appreciate any thoughts on this aspect in particular!
Thanks