Technical DPF regeneration failed.

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Technical DPF regeneration failed.

I'm at a loss overall but some things/clarifications come to mind.

Did the new DPF have at least a couple of smoke free regens after it was installed, or was it also smoky from the start?

This thing about the dashboard resetting -- is there more than the messages you'd get if you manually disabled the cruise control?

Is your oil level going down?

Is the reconditioned engine the same type as the one before?

What I can offer is if you record a regen attempt with the speed, rpm, instant fuel consumption, differential pressure, DPF temperature I can try to match that next time mine is due and we can compare the data. Ideally with some normal driving before.

Looking at your graphs again, your DPF is quite blocked and the soot load should be way above 100%. Do you have a longer recording?eplace
In the first regeneration with new DPF there was a very low smoke. In the followings more smoke but not so before replacing.
Yes, the oil level is going down. Now i have to replace the PCV valve, because is passing oil to the intake (second time replaced with the new engine).
I can't export my recordings. I use Ediag app.
I had the same regeneration problema before replacing the engine. Replacing the inyectors became crazy, triggering to have to get a new engine.
 
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There's a document from FIAT listing possible causes of DPF malfunction:

1 - Incorrect thermostat operation
2 - Incorrect flow meter reading
3 - Incorrect injection operation
4 - Presence of oil in intake circuit
5 - Turbo compressor problems
6 - EGR valve problems
7 - Condensation
8 - Oil leakage from valve guides

On 3 (injectors) it says:
high particulate production-regeneration cannot be run.
- check correspondence between IMA injector codes and injector codes written in ECU.
- try to reset self-learnt injection amount.
- replace the injectors.

4 seems relevant given you have an issue with oil in the intake.

On 6, EGR valve --
The EGR valve problems are the most difficult to diagnose.
Faults of this component will cause high smokiness and as in the other cases, incoherent CCM data and consequent lighting of the engine warning light (MIL) and the generation of fault code P1206.
In the most severe cases, the ECU has an internal diagnostic procedure with the generation of a specific error code.
The faults of this component are not easy to diagnose in the least severe cases. Replacement is therefore recommended.
 
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This would be my current theory:
- the smoke and high temperature are "normal" when trying to regen a DPF with heavy soot load.
- the dashboard glitch is "normal" when a regen attempt gets interrupted.
- the regen gets interrupted when the pressure goes too high during the regen. This is why driving gently sometimes works.
- regen attempts at 85% soot load indicate that the ECU is confused about the state of the DPF. The ECU thinks the soot load is low but the pressure sensor says it is high. The regens keep happening too late.

Why the mismatch?

- either because the mechanic failed to reset the soot load with the new DPF, but this should have "self-corrected" after the first regen

- or because the exhaust contains abnormally high soot, so the DPF is filling up faster than normal

- the root cause for the high soot production could be any of the 8 things listed in the previous post.
 
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There's a document from FIAT listing possible causes of DPF malfunction:

1 - Incorrect thermostat operation
2 - Incorrect flow meter reading
3 - Incorrect injection operation
4 - Presence of oil in intake circuit
5 - Turbo compressor problems
6 - EGR valve problems
7 - Condensation
8 - Oil leakage from valve guides

On 3 (injectors) it says:
high particulate production-regeneration cannot be run.
- check correspondence between IMA injector codes and injector codes written in ECU.
- try to reset self-learnt injection amount.
- replace the injectors.

4 seems relevant given you have an issue with oil in the intake.

On 6, EGR valve --
The EGR valve problems are the most difficult to diagnose.
Faults of this component will cause high smokiness and as in the other cases, incoherent CCM data and consequent lighting of the engine warning light (MIL) and the generation of fault code P1206.
In the most severe cases, the ECU has an internal diagnostic procedure with the generation of a specific error code.
The faults of this component are not easy to diagnose in the least severe cases. Replacement is therefore recommended.
I'm trying for a new garage. Because mine is not interested in waste enough time to find the problem... I'm looking for a Fiat official garage but they don't want campers. They do not accept campers directly or when I say it's a camper, they give for three months.
In the meantime i'm going to try by myself something regarding the problem of oil in the intake. I'm going to unplugg the tube from PCV valve avoiding to enter oil from the engine to the intake. So it's going to have always clean air and maybe get a better regeneration. Just for try.
 
There's a document from FIAT listing possible causes of DPF malfunction:

1 - Incorrect thermostat operation
2 - Incorrect flow meter reading
3 - Incorrect injection operation
4 - Presence of oil in intake circuit
5 - Turbo compressor problems
6 - EGR valve problems
7 - Condensation
8 - Oil leakage from valve guides

On 3 (injectors) it says:
high particulate production-regeneration cannot be run.
- check correspondence between IMA injector codes and injector codes written in ECU.
- try to reset self-learnt injection amount.
- replace the injectors.

4 seems relevant given you have an issue with oil in the intake.

On 6, EGR valve --
The EGR valve problems are the most difficult to diagnose.
Faults of this component will cause high smokiness and as in the other cases, incoherent CCM data and consequent lighting of the engine warning light (MIL) and the generation of fault code P1206.
In the most severe cases, the ECU has an internal diagnostic procedure with the generation of a specific error code.
The faults of this component are not easy to diagnose in the least severe cases. Replacement is therefore recommended.

There's a document from FIAT listing possible causes of DPF malfunction:

1 - Incorrect thermostat operation
2 - Incorrect flow meter reading
3 - Incorrect injection operation
4 - Presence of oil in intake circuit
5 - Turbo compressor problems
6 - EGR valve problems
7 - Condensation
8 - Oil leakage from valve guides

On 3 (injectors) it says:
high particulate production-regeneration cannot be run.
- check correspondence between IMA injector codes and injector codes written in ECU.
- try to reset self-learnt injection amount.
- replace the injectors.

4 seems relevant given you have an issue with oil in the intake.

On 6, EGR valve --
The EGR valve problems are the most difficult to diagnose.
Faults of this component will cause high smokiness and as in the other cases, incoherent CCM data and consequent lighting of the engine warning light (MIL) and the generation of fault code P1206.
In the most severe cases, the ECU has an internal diagnostic procedure with the generation of a specific error code.
The faults of this component are not easy to diagnose in the least severe cases. Replacement is therefore recommended.
Hi,

lycopersicum, can you share that document?​

Thanks in advance.
 
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HI,
I’m still facing the same issue. I’ve cleaned the EGR valve, replaced the throttle body, and also replaced the PCV valve, so there should no longer be oil entering the intake.
However, the problem persists. During regeneration there’s a lot of white smoke, and sometimes it feels like a momentary power cut, as if the ignition was turned off.
Yesterday, during a regeneration cycle, the temperature at the DPF inlet reached 893 °C, then the process stopped suddenly and the ECU stored code P2085-11 (exhaust gas temperature sensor fault).
So, even with the new DPF, new sensors, and a clean intake system, regenerations are still interrupted due to excessive temperature and heavy white smoke.
On top of that, I’m now getting bursts of black smoke when shifting gears, even when the DPF isn’t regenerating. Overall, there’s more continuous smoke than before.
 
The black smoke indicates unburned/partially burned fuel.

It also means that unfortunately your DPF must have cracked from the excessive heat and is letting the soot through.

On the plus side, all of this would seem to narrow down the issue to an overfueling issue. The engine is running too rich. This causes the high temperature and the excess soot / frequent regens.

I think the exhaust system is not to blame and the issue is with the fuel injection or air intake system.

Others will be more competent than me to take it from there...

You could try to find a good diesel injection specialist and tell them to ignore the DPF problems for now and investigate a potential overfueling problem.
 
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HI,
I’m still facing the same issue. I’ve cleaned the EGR valve, replaced the throttle body, and also replaced the PCV valve, so there should no longer be oil entering the intake.
However, the problem persists. During regeneration there’s a lot of white smoke, and sometimes it feels like a momentary power cut, as if the ignition was turned off.
Yesterday, during a regeneration cycle, the temperature at the DPF inlet reached 893 °C, then the process stopped suddenly and the ECU stored code P2085-11 (exhaust gas temperature sensor fault).
So, even with the new DPF, new sensors, and a clean intake system, regenerations are still interrupted due to excessive temperature and heavy white smoke.
On top of that, I’m now getting bursts of black smoke when shifting gears, even when the DPF isn’t regenerating. Overall, there’s more continuous smoke than before.
Have you got any data of a regen with percentage clogging. Have you a graph of the inlet reaching 893C.
I can only agree with @lycopersicum
On the plus side, all of this would seem to narrow down the issue to an overfueling issue. The engine is running too rich. This causes the high temperature and the excess soot / frequent regens.I think the exhaust system is not to blame and the issue is with the fuel injection or air intake system.

The one thing that has not been confirmed (or I couldnt find it) is the coding of the injectors are they correct in the physical location. I once seen a van with 2 new injectors and 2 in wrong position that clogged the DPF too quickly and high differential dpf pressures, a recoding and physical DPF clean resolved that isssue.
Have you done a leak off test?
 
Have you got any data of a regen with percentage clogging. Have you a graph of the inlet reaching 893C.
I can only agree with @lycopersicum
On the plus side, all of this would seem to narrow down the issue to an overfueling issue. The engine is running too rich. This causes the high temperature and the excess soot / frequent regens.I think the exhaust system is not to blame and the issue is with the fuel injection or air intake system.

The one thing that has not been confirmed (or I couldnt find it) is the coding of the injectors are they correct in the physical location. I once seen a van with 2 new injectors and 2 in wrong position that clogged the DPF too quickly and high differential dpf pressures, a recoding and physical DPF clean resolved that isssue.
Have you done a leak off test?
Here you have the graphical when the temperature get 893C. And then when it fall to 200C when the error appear and the regeneration is stopped.
How can I do the leak off test?
I’m working with a new mechanic now, and he can’t check the injector coding because they’re refurbished, not new, and don’t have the codes printed on them. I guess my previous mechanic had those codes when he bought them. Anyway, the injection correction values seem to be within the acceptable range of ±2.
 

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Here you have the graphical when the temperature get 893C. And then when it fall to 200C when the error appear and the regeneration is stopped.
How can I do the leak off test?
I’m working with a new mechanic now, and he can’t check the injector coding because they’re refurbished, not new, and don’t have the codes printed on them. I guess my previous mechanic had those codes when he bought them. Anyway, the injection correction values seem to be within the acceptable range of ±2.

It looks like the temperature sensor may have actually burned out during this event.
 
It looks like the temperature sensor may have actually burned out during this event.
When I stopped the engine and started it again, the sensor began reading correctly. But I’m afraid it might have been damaged. I replaced it last August.
It’s crazy to replace it only for it to burn out again on the next regeneration.
 
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