Hi There, I'm struggling to get information on how to remove my egr completely on my jeep, this incld cooler, egr valve, pipes ext. I know there's a mod to block off the 2 vacuum pipes to bypass the egr, but I'm looking to remove the whole system and block it off where necessary. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
[FONT="]Firstly, what differences are there between the 2004 model sold in South Africa, and the 2005 - 2006 Jeep Liberty CRD vehicles sold here in North America? There is a fellow here who sells an intake elbow kit that completely removes the EGR and the Flow Control Valve off of the North American models. This gets rid of some terrible, failure-prone parts, and provides for a smooth intake of fresh air into the engine, but there is some risk to installing one.
In the North American models, the EGR valve doubles as a turbocharger blow-off valve during driving conditions that can cause a spike in turbo boost pressure. In some cases, the spike in pressure can be so great as to destroy the turbo. Admittedly this is a very rare condition, but it is enough of a risk that a lot of people, including Keith at Green Diesel Engineering, (who is the most respected up-grader of Diesel Jeeps in North America), to NOT install the current intake elbow offered in his own Liberty CRD.
I am developing a superior version of the intake elbow kit currently being offered. My version will offer superior materials, and plugged threaded ports where aftermarket items like turbo boost gauge sending units, and a 1" hose barb for a turbo blow off valve can be installed. A turbo blow off valve is the item that will protect your turbocharger during those times while driving when a spike in boost pressure can happen.
I am also the only manufacturer in the entire world of an aftermarket engine thermostat for the V.M. Motori R428 turbo-diesel engine. Part of the problems that occur with the R428 engine, (at least here in North America, and I suspect, in Europe), stem from the terrible engine thermostat it is saddled with. [/FONT]
[FONT="]It is an assembly; meaning that, until recently, no aftermarket manufacturer would touch it, forcing the owner to go through the car dealers or V.M. Motori diesel parts importers to get an original equipment part replacement. The O.E. part is terrible... it is expensive, costly to replace, it fails every 40 to 60,000 kms, and it is not even manufactured with reasonable opening temperatures as they make the engine run way too cool. The bad pollution control systems that are on any of the diesel engine vehicles manufactured in the past 10 years operate even worse if the engine is not running hot.
My engine thermostat solves all of these issues, and makes thermostat valve change outs inexpensive and easy to do. Check out my photo gallery, or the following thread on LOSTJEEPS.com.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Real feedback starts on page 14, so this is the page I have linked. Feel free to read the entire thread over, and I think you will see that I am indeed serious about Jeep Liberty/Cherokee Diesel upgrades. [/FONT]