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BMW 3-Series (E90 E92) Forum
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Carbon build up! Here is how to stop it!
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11-30-2013, 02:44 PM | #67 |
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Would it be better to shift manually while driving in the city (lots of stop lights, slow traffic, etc)?
Just so the engine would rev up more than usual? Driving normally in D the car would not rev more than 2000 RPM. Lots of Idle time too. |
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11-30-2013, 03:38 PM | #68 |
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Excellent question. I do wonder if driving it in manual is harder on the transmission than in automatic. Manual certainly is more fun!
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12-10-2013, 09:47 PM | #69 |
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Finally got my car back today.
I really hope they fixed everything this time. SCR, particulate filter and diesel filter were replaced. They found diesel fuel inside the SCR, which was also clogged. My guess is that I did not get the regeneration to clean the filter. ECU fault? |
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12-11-2013, 07:24 AM | #70 | |
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12-11-2013, 09:59 AM | #71 |
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They also replaced the diesel filter.
I am not sure if they wrote down accurately what they did. I believe in this case the diesel filter would be the diesel fuel filter. It may also be the diesel particulate filter. I just don't know. The SA had no idea what sort of worked was performed on my car. |
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12-11-2013, 03:31 PM | #72 |
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here's a BMW video
the DPF itself is a combination of oxidation catalyst and the filter. The oxydation catalyst sets the unburned fuel in the exhaust gasses during a regeneration on fire to heat up the filter and burn the collected soot to ash. However it can't cope with too much fuel (or oil, being hydrocarbon too), resulting from say a leaking injector, blown turbo seal etc. In that case the fuel/oil goes thru the oxidation catalyst without being burned, and both the DPF, and the SCR get polluted with fuel / oil. The DPF might recover from this after an succesfull regen, but the SCR won't. Last edited by F104; 12-12-2013 at 02:27 PM.. |
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12-12-2013, 05:59 AM | #73 |
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Nice video
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12-15-2013, 08:29 PM | #74 |
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Ecotune with EGR delete = no soot entering intake
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12-17-2013, 08:49 PM | #75 | |
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The theory on glazing (or "wet stacking") and carbon deposits on the intake side is that blow by and poor combustion processes increase carbon deposits. In particular, the potential for deposits related to the combustion of oil is increased when crankcase pressure is raised due to glazing. If you believe that trying to combust engine oil at low head temps would result in increased carbon deposits, the theory makes sense. -Mike |
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12-18-2013, 07:46 AM | #76 | |
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12-18-2013, 10:38 AM | #78 |
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No problem, just cruise at 80 mph in 3rd or 4th gear. Problem solved.
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12-18-2013, 11:05 AM | #79 |
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My French nephew mentioned that it is known at least for the new Peugeot diesels to build up carbon if they are used primarily in city driving and not "opened up" on the highway.
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12-18-2013, 01:24 PM | #80 | ||
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My post should have said mph, not kph. It's just under 140 kph indicated in 6th when it comes out of EGR mode |
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12-18-2013, 05:32 PM | #81 | |
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12-18-2013, 06:05 PM | #82 |
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Here is a map of the EGR utilization. It's for the M57, but with both high and low pressure EGR (so probably from the X5). I haven't found a 335d (with only high pressure EGR) specific EGR map.
Based on this map, I'm not sure how you can assume for a given power requirement to maintain a certain speed, how you can use a different gear to shut off the EGR. The higher the rpm, the less torque you need to get the power you need for the speed you are going... I think you'll always be getting lots of EGR utilization unless you remove the EGR path. Unless you are above ~4000 rpm... |
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12-18-2013, 09:27 PM | #83 |
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I am trying to stay within the maximum torque range (1750-2500 RPM) with occasional burst up to 3000-4000 RPM.
This is way different than what I used to drive like. In the past I used to keep the RPM as low as possible, rarely at 2500. |
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12-19-2013, 10:44 AM | #84 | |||
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- Air resistance is 1/2 * 1.2 (mass of air at 20C) * 50^2 * frontal area of some 2 mtr2 * Cd of 0.3, or 900N. - Rolling tyre resistance estimated at 1,25% of weight of car (1700kg), or 210 N - Total is then 1110N. - To generate that wheel traction you need 355 Nm wheel torque (0,32 mtr wheel radius) - With 0.69 (highest gear ratio) and 2.81 diff for the 335d, overall ratio is 1.938. Therefore 183 Nm engine torque. - Driveline losses estimated at 5Nm base value (altenator etc), plus 2% of the driveline torque. So 5 + 4 = 9 Nm - New total is now 192 Nm at 3200 rpm for this speed (112mph..). Just on the edge of the EGR area on that map.. Just as a cross check, same calc with 75mtr/sec (270 kph/4800rpm) matches the value on the 335 torque curve nicely. So assumptins seem to be correct and 270 would then be your topspeed without the limiter (given the 20C temp, tyre diameter etc). |
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12-19-2013, 01:33 PM | #85 |
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While interesting, all of this is completely insane.
What kind of moron would buy a 335d instead of a 335i knowing that you have to drive the 335d in a way that makes the reason why you bought the car irrelevant? "What about all that massive torque?" Hello? A 335i is quicker and can be tuned just as easily. The point of the 335d is that you can get good fuel efficiency AND good performance. To say that I am hurting my car by cruising at 70-80 MPH and enjoying the 600 mile range it gets me is...silly. It is a design issue and it isn't our fault. :roll eyes: I will continue to drive in a reasonable fashion and hold BMW to account for quality issues. |
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12-19-2013, 02:40 PM | #86 | |
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Agreed. We would have figured BMW had worked this out with their years of experience. Maybe even a cost effective means of cleaning it. |
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12-19-2013, 03:55 PM | #87 | |
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Today a 328i can do the same, but for me it has a one time $ 5000 tax penalty vs. the 320d. |
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12-20-2013, 08:04 AM | #88 |
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I am exclusive in DS mode now. I am also running RPMs up and manually shifting in the city.
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