NikTheGeek
New Member
I was interested in the whole "poke a pipe through it" bit. I guess a tester wouldn't tell by looking and a diesel isn't tested on emissions. Would it make a noticable improvement?
Nik
Nik
Its a bit of a grey area really,
from Vosa's website it certainly seems to only relate to petrol engined vehicles.
I have also have spoke to a couple of MOT testers who have also confirmed the cat test only applies to petrol cars. so there's not an issue with De-catting a diesel with regards to passing the MOT test.
I have heard that a cat fitted to a diesel is for mostly reducing the smell of diesel that is produced from the exhaust
I do know that they can smell a bit once de-catted, so that statement may be true ...
As a tester myself a cat test is for petrol and a dpf is for newer vehicle ie 2009 ish onwards a p38 has a soot collector not a dpf! Dpf are built into the ecu managment a p38 soot collector isnt.
Dpf are fitted to euro 4/5 diesels to help with the emmisions a p38 is a euro two.
If a car was presented for test and a soot collector or a modified exhaust was fitted and it had two boxes removed how are you meant to know if the original exhaust has 3 silencers or 2 as there isnt no way of find out unless you have the same model next to you that hasnt been touched since it left the factory
the mot test is a bare minimum standards to be deemed roadworthy at time of test.
All tester test slightly different its a known factor and always will be.
Well thats my rant over!!!!!!![]()
tiz recomended to remove them if the vehicle is only used on short urban runs.
That would sort of defeat the object of fitting them in the first place.![]()
No. it is because, as you said, they need a regular 20 mile run @ 50mph to clean or "regenerate" the DPF. if not, it can screw up the EMS.
BBC - Watchdog: Is your diesel filter out of kilter?
As a tester myself a cat test is for petrol and a dpf is for newer vehicle ie 2009 ish onwards a p38 has a soot collector not a dpf! Dpf are built into the ecu managment a p38 soot collector isnt.
Dpf are fitted to euro 4/5 diesels to help with the emmisions a p38 is a euro two.
If a car was presented for test and a soot collector or a modified exhaust was fitted and it had two boxes removed how are you meant to know if the original exhaust has 3 silencers or 2 as there isnt no way of find out unless you have the same model next to you that hasnt been touched since it left the factory
the mot test is a bare minimum standards to be deemed roadworthy at time of test.
All tester test slightly different its a known factor and always will be.
Well thats my rant over!!!!!!![]()
You can/could get them with/without them fitted but most have them fitted nowadays the best vehicle ive seen them fitted to is a 12/13 defenders which are primary use for .......... slow offroading and trotting around a farm a dpf unit requires long runs with high exhaust temps seems silly to me dont you think!!!
What is explain please?![]()
No set noise levels for production cars only bikes and kit cars