Steviegiuce5
New Member
- May 17, 2021
- 6
- 1
- Truck Year
- 2014
Hey all,
I’m Stevie and I’m new to this page. I’ve had diesel BMW’s before so I am familiar with diesel but this is my first EcoDiesel! I bought a 2014 EcoDiesel a few months ago and I have some question about it cuz German and American diesel are quite different! I want to know how you know when your EcoDiesel is doing a regen and also how do you tell when it needs a regen? I have never received a message saying that it needs one, that one is in progress, or that one has been completed. When the bmw’s did regens you saw black smoke then white smoke coming out of the exhausts. When I was trying to find my trunk one of the EcoDiesel test drove said dpf 75% full when I started it and told me to drive on the highway to start regen (worked out because I got a longer rest drive out of it! Haha ) so when it went into a regen getting on the highway a ton of white smoke starting billowing out the exhaust for a minute or two, is that normal? I’ve put probably about 8,000 miles on my truck and have not noticed it doing a regen once and I only drive on the highway 10% of the time and 90% of the time is spent backroads driving going 45mph to 55mph but I’ve never seen the rpm’s go up and stay over 2 rpms until the regen is done like the bmw did. An off topic question I have is what is the normal operating temperature range of the oil and coolant and at what temp does the tstat fully open(I know the whole Jeep, dodge, and Ram family likes to have the tstat’s fully open around 220’s to 230’s)? The owners manual says as long as the coolant gauge isn’t on the H it is in normal operating temp so it can be right under H and be at normal operating temperature which to me still sounds too hot but is that really a normal coolant temp on the gauge? Mine was right underneath the 3/4 marker the other day which was a little too hot for my comfort, everyone I know that has had a black car over 4 or 5 years old it has over heated and ever after having a black truck that over heated and was “fixed” but still overheated I get nervous about having a black truck again that’s a little bit older; that it’s going to over heat on me. . Sorry that question was off topic! Lastly I know somewhat about deleting emissions systems but still have some questions. So with deleting the emission system, I live in Massachusetts where you have to pass an OBD emissions inspection, no sniff or tailpipe test unless your rolling coal going into the inspection station. Are there tunes that act like the cheat devices car makers were putting in that will just say all the systems are ready? Or do you have to put the dpf and everything back on every year and reflash to pass your inspection? I see a ton of trucks in Massachusetts that roll coal, have str8 pipes, and you can even hear that they deleted their emissions system and I feel like not as many people would do it if you have to undelete it and redelete the emissions crap every year because that sounds kind of like a pain in the ass!
Sorry for the very long post for my first post!
TIA for your help!
I’m Stevie and I’m new to this page. I’ve had diesel BMW’s before so I am familiar with diesel but this is my first EcoDiesel! I bought a 2014 EcoDiesel a few months ago and I have some question about it cuz German and American diesel are quite different! I want to know how you know when your EcoDiesel is doing a regen and also how do you tell when it needs a regen? I have never received a message saying that it needs one, that one is in progress, or that one has been completed. When the bmw’s did regens you saw black smoke then white smoke coming out of the exhausts. When I was trying to find my trunk one of the EcoDiesel test drove said dpf 75% full when I started it and told me to drive on the highway to start regen (worked out because I got a longer rest drive out of it! Haha ) so when it went into a regen getting on the highway a ton of white smoke starting billowing out the exhaust for a minute or two, is that normal? I’ve put probably about 8,000 miles on my truck and have not noticed it doing a regen once and I only drive on the highway 10% of the time and 90% of the time is spent backroads driving going 45mph to 55mph but I’ve never seen the rpm’s go up and stay over 2 rpms until the regen is done like the bmw did. An off topic question I have is what is the normal operating temperature range of the oil and coolant and at what temp does the tstat fully open(I know the whole Jeep, dodge, and Ram family likes to have the tstat’s fully open around 220’s to 230’s)? The owners manual says as long as the coolant gauge isn’t on the H it is in normal operating temp so it can be right under H and be at normal operating temperature which to me still sounds too hot but is that really a normal coolant temp on the gauge? Mine was right underneath the 3/4 marker the other day which was a little too hot for my comfort, everyone I know that has had a black car over 4 or 5 years old it has over heated and ever after having a black truck that over heated and was “fixed” but still overheated I get nervous about having a black truck again that’s a little bit older; that it’s going to over heat on me. . Sorry that question was off topic! Lastly I know somewhat about deleting emissions systems but still have some questions. So with deleting the emission system, I live in Massachusetts where you have to pass an OBD emissions inspection, no sniff or tailpipe test unless your rolling coal going into the inspection station. Are there tunes that act like the cheat devices car makers were putting in that will just say all the systems are ready? Or do you have to put the dpf and everything back on every year and reflash to pass your inspection? I see a ton of trucks in Massachusetts that roll coal, have str8 pipes, and you can even hear that they deleted their emissions system and I feel like not as many people would do it if you have to undelete it and redelete the emissions crap every year because that sounds kind of like a pain in the ass!
Sorry for the very long post for my first post!
TIA for your help!