Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 45 total)
  • DPF issues… Talk to me
  • frogrocket
    Free Member

    Anyone experienced any? Particularly interested if it’s related to Fords as looking at buying a C-Max.

    Details about how much they cost to sort and how to avoid problems appreciated.

    Cheers

    craigxxl
    Free Member

    If you’re going to be doing short commutes and school runs without a regular long run then just buy a petrol. If you get to do regular long runs then the DPF management will take care of itself and you need not worry.

    frogrocket
    Free Member

    How regular are we talking?

    craigxxl
    Free Member

    I would say every other week

    molgrips
    Free Member

    DPFs can’t actually fail, as such. They are just a filter. If your engine is producing a lot of smoke then the DPF will get clogged, and people seem to be calling that a DPF failure and replacing it, without fixing what was making the engine smoke in the first place.

    But generally – they last well if looked after. Although I’m not sure about Ford, they seem to have a worse design that has a limited life.

    As for doing long runs – it should tell you if it’s been unable to regenerate the DPF on its own, and a light will come on. This must not be ignored – it’ll tell you all about it in the manual. It won’t be able to regenerate itself properly if you only do short trips, because it won’t have time to complete the cycle. I think cycles require 20-minute drives on open roads, or thereabouts.

    Yak
    Full Member

    A long run will allow a passive regen -ie enough heat build up to do it by itself. If you only do short runs it will start to do active regens where the timing changes and more fuel is burnt to get the dpf temp up. This should be obvious as the throttle response may be sluggish and the vehicle make a slightly different sound. This is when you need to drive at 40ish or over for a steady 10-15mins without stopping.

    The light comes on when you’ve failed to do all the above as the dpf has reached a pre-set capacity and definitely needs a regen.

    edit this is on a vw. I imagine it would be similar on a ford.

    Lazgoat
    Free Member

    I have a 2006 Focus with a DPF.The Eoyls fluid should be topped up at about 75k if I recall. It has a Ford service at 74k and they never mentioned it to me. It ran out at 76k and had to go in again to get the car out of limp mode, rest the error light and top it up, about £275 for a couple of litres of fluid!

    The DPF failed shortly after that too! £1150 was the cheapest i child find for a Ford replacement. £750 for it to be removed and the ECU remapped.

    I wouldn’t buy another one.

    Yak
    Full Member

    aha – so not at all similar! It needs an additional fluid?
    Ignore my post please… 🙄

    njee20
    Free Member

    A long run will allow a passive regen -ie enough heat build up to do it by itself. If you only do short runs it will start to do active regens where the timing changes and more fuel is burnt to get the dpf temp up. This should be obvious as the throttle response may be sluggish and the vehicle make a slightly different sound. This is when you need to drive at 40ish or over for a steady 10-15mins without stopping.

    The light comes on when you’ve failed to do all the above as the dpf has reached a pre-set capacity and definitely needs a regen.

    I’ve had a Golf GT TDI with DPF for about 9 months now, and have never noticed it doing anything differently, noise, performance or otherwise. I was mildly concerned I was going to have warning lights popping up constantly and what not, but it seems to just do its thing. Slightly concerned as it’s done 65k miles, and according to some that’s about the design life of the DPF…

    Yak
    Full Member

    njee20 – your driving style might might enough for passive only regens -so you’ll never notice. I do lots of short runs, with the odd long one too, so I’ve noticed the active regen happening every 3ish weeks.

    I think many dpfs go well over a forum-discussed ‘design’ life. Don’t worry about it.

    jairaj
    Full Member

    aha – so not at all similar! It needs an additional fluid?

    The eyls fluid is a catalyst for the regen combustion. I’d guess the ECU would be cleaver enough to detect you are only doing low /medium speeds and the DPF isn’t getting hot enough to fully burn the contaminants so squirts a bit of the eoyls fluid to help burn it off.

    If doing long motorway driving I’d guess the DPF would get hot enough and the ECU would reduce the amount of Eoyls fluid used.

    The fluid won’t guaranty the DPF never fills up but it does help to prolong the life.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    VWs don’t use the fluid. That’s the Ford design afaik, also used in some other engines.

    mc
    Free Member

    Eoyls fluid is used by most PSA engines, which is why some fords have it and not others.

    DPFs are usually fine as long as you’re doing long runs. Actual life spans can vary greatly, but generally any that get used for regular long runs will easily go well past 100k.
    We maintain some vans that reach 4-500k before DPFs become an issue.

    The biggest issue is if the engine does develop a fault that causes excess soot to be produced, you’ll never know about it until the DPF becomes fully loaded, as the DPF filters the soot so you never see it come out the exhaust.

    DPFs can be cleaned, however I’m not entirely sure of the effectiveness as it’s not an option we use at work. Most vehicles we experience DPF faults on are ones where downtime and reliability are far higher up the importance scale than cost. i.e. the £700 for another 200k+ trouble free use is better value than £100 for lesser mileage with a higher breakdown risk.

    gonzy
    Free Member

    i had the same dilema when i bought the wife her c-max last summer…petrol or diesel?
    i’d read about the DPF issues and got scared off by similar stories to Lazquot’s….seeing as the car would be doing a lot of urban driving we bought the petrol version instead…(2010 1.6 zetec)

    Frogrocket…in terms of an owners review…overall the car is very good to drive and doesnt feel like an MPV on the road,
    but beware that the front A pillars can restrict your view of the road…something you’ll just get used to…and although the boot is massive…the seats dont fold flat…(see pic)

    getting a bike in there can be a pain. with the front wheel off it will just about squeeze in diagonally so no room for another bike so both wheels have to come off

    travo
    Free Member

    The 1.6 ford motors use the fluid based dpf, which have a more issues than the non fluid based 2.0 tdci lump.
    I’ve got a 08 2.0 litre Mondeo which has now done 120k with no problems, hardly ever notice the dpf regening.

    I know the vw group cars seem to suffer with a fair few dpf issues which after some research (mainly owners forums) put me of them. Saying that though I think all cars with dpf’s are prone to problems if you do low mileage, short journeys.

    chaos
    Full Member

    Lazgoat – Member £750 for it to be removed and the ECU remapped.

    Remember this is illegal now – MOT & DPF rule

    eskay
    Full Member

    My father had one fail on his Lexus. He was quoted up to 2.5k to repair. The dpf was 1.5k and there were 2 sensors in the dpf housing that cost £500 each and if they could not get them out then the cost of replacing them would have to be added on. Cost him £2K.

    The chap at the Lexus garage seemed to think that Toyota are going to stop producing diesels at some point because of the problems all of the emission restrictions cause them.

    weeksy
    Full Member

    Mine is on 88,000, 2010 Mondeo. The DPF is giving a few issues, apparently they’re a 100k miles service/replace item.

    My local expert wants £430 to remove, have it ultrasonically cleaned and then replace. Should then last another 100k..

    It’s expensive I guess, but considering I’ve had it nearly 2 years and it’s cost me only a few cheap services and some tyres, I’m not too unhappy. It’s averaging 54mpg too, so a decent saving over petrol for the 45,000 I’ve now owned it for.

    I know these figures as just today the car was in the garage for analysis and discussions.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    What engine weeksy?

    BigEaredBiker
    Free Member

    Remember this is illegal now – MOT & DPF rule

    I think its been illegal for some time but they have clarified the MOT rules now so a visual check to ensure the DPF is still present is done.

    This still won’t fail a car that’s had the contents of the DPF removed with the actual DPF kept as no emissions test is performed (only a smoke test on diesels).

    As far as I can tell you risk a £1000 fine if you are caught driving a car with the DPF removed. That’s actually cheaper than repairing the DPF properly for most people so I’m not sure how effective a deterrent it is. Many firms still offer DPF removal on their websites.

    leftyboy
    Free Member

    @gonzy rear seats do lift out seperatly though so as I have only one child we can usually dispense with 2 x back seats for long/camping type journeys. Only pain is storing the seats as they are relatively heavy and bulky.

    weeksy
    Full Member

    molgrips – Member

    What engine weeksy?

    2.0 mate. Car is brilliant apart from this minor issue.

    Every now and again I get ‘engine malfuction’ which came with the engine management light on last week. They diagnosed it as the DPF from their computers, cleared the faults, did a forced Regen and then sent me on my way to try it out. Couple of days later it’s done the engine malfunction again twice, but not storing the codes in the ECU at the moment, so not 100% on what to do. But he still feels it will need a DFP replacing soonish.

    The DPF replacement was about £560. The Cleaning was a chunk cheaper. You can get cheaper DPFs, £140-160 on Ebay, but he also rekons they’re rubbish.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    As above – your engine could be producing too much smoke, so the DPF is a symptom not a cause.

    weeksy
    Full Member

    molgrips – Member

    As above – your engine could be producing too much smoke, so the DPF is a symptom not a cause.

    Visually it doesn’t appear to be mate no, there’s certainly nothing coming out the back even when booted.

    Waiting now really for the light to return and then will drop over to the garage when it’s on so I can get them to plug their gubbins in.

    gonzy
    Free Member

    rear seats do lift out seperatly

    i figured this out a few months after getting the car when i decided to read the owners handbook

    Only pain is storing the seats as they are relatively heavy and bulky.

    no space to store them in the house and wife would go ballistic if she saw me dismantling her car!!

    oh how i wish i’d tried harder in convincing her to get a proper estate!!

    speed12
    Free Member

    Visually it doesn’t appear to be mate no, there’s certainly nothing coming out the back even when booted.

    As someone else mentioned above – the unfortunate downside of a DPF is that because it filters the soot out, if your engine is producing more smoke than normal it doesn’t get past the DPF and so the driver never actually ‘sees’ increased smoke.

    Main culprit for increased smoke is the EGR valve stuck open – soot will then go up a lot. Does the car feel sluggish on pullaways or when driving at high load? usually a sign of an EGR issue.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    EGR would probably throw a fault code though?

    Could maybe be MAF issue?

    piesoup
    Free Member

    You say driving long journeys as opposed to short ones for regens to occur passively. I used to have a 50 mile commute, where I sat in 6th gear at 1500rpm for over an hour each way.. That certainly wasn’t enough as it regen’d every 300 miles, with out fail. Forscan, plugged into the OBD port confirmed this.
    So, they want yo to drive long distance as higher revs. So much for ‘reducing emmisions’.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    So, they want yo to drive long distance as higher revs

    Not quite. Motorway speeds will be enough, you presumably weren’t going that fast. However, if your car is running for long enough then the active regen will work, this is normal and it’s working.

    The issue comes when you don’t run it long enough for the active regen to complete – takes 20 mins or something.

    weeksy
    Full Member

    As someone else mentioned above – the unfortunate downside of a DPF is that because it filters the soot out, if your engine is producing more smoke than normal it doesn’t get past the DPF and so the driver never actually ‘sees’ increased smoke.

    Main culprit for increased smoke is the EGR valve stuck open – soot will then go up a lot. Does the car feel sluggish on pullaways or when driving at high load? usually a sign of an EGR issue.

    No mate, drives like a dream. Even when the light comes on it still doesn’t go into limp home etc… drives nice.

    brassneck
    Full Member

    Main culprit for increased smoke is the EGR valve stuck open – soot will then go up a lot. Does the car feel sluggish on pullaways or when driving at high load? usually a sign of an EGR issue.

    Interesting. Having a really weird issue with the S Max where, sometimes, it will lose power and jump or judder under load. Backing off the throttle seems to help, but it just goes away and comes back.

    Put it down to crappy supermarket fuels and used Super/Optimax/whatever and it seemed to improve, but not cure it. Definitely more prevalent when loaded, even down to filling the tank.
    Maybe it is an EGR issue, is there anything I could do at home to check? No warning lights posted. (1.8 TDCi)

    hora
    Free Member

    TBH unless you do significantly over the mileage v initial outlay cost why bother getting a complex diesel? To make a diesel work the repair cost+initial outlay has to outweigh massive miles difference.

    Just the worry there alone puts me off. I was talking to a taxi driver the other day- he spends circa 1k every six months on repairs to his Mondeo diesel but then he does three times in the annual average mileage.

    Diesels cost more to buy, fuel costs more and then when things go wrong.

    Plus you’ve got the **** who blank off/cover the thing thats supposed to capture the cancerous fumes.

    gonzy
    Free Member

    my second car was a 2000 audi 2.5 tdi quattro…between me and my brother we covered over 200k on it without any issues, on the original exhausts too…but then again i’m not sure if audis of that age ever had DPFs in them

    Hora!! where ya been man?!

    Gary_C
    Full Member

    I had a 2005 C-Max 1.6TDCI & the engine management light came on after a long motorway journey back oop north from Somerset, had the fault code read, & the DPF fluid needed replenishing. That lightened my wallet by £200 at the Ford dealer…

    Ref the pic above with the seats, just do what I did with mine, & that’s just unclip the seats & lift them out. Plenty of room for bikes then.

    jonk
    Full Member

    I have a citreon with DPF and i smashed the internals out of the filter, got a new ECU map off a nice guy from the internets + extra power. Uploaded it using a £10 cable and jobs a good’un. Its been through 4 MOT’s including the recent one’s where they check the DPF and no problems.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    TBH unless you do significantly over the mileage v initial outlay cost why bother getting a complex diesel?

    There needn’t be an initial outlay. If I go into a garage with £10k in my pocket I can come out with petrol or diesel. Petrol will be a bit newer, but I’ve not spent any more money.

    Anyway I much prefer driving diesels compared with NA petrol.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Yeah, me too- I’m used to v-twin motorbikes, I love the lazy waft of a big diesel. You can get the same from petrol of course, but not at 60mpg.

    But then, mine never had a DPF.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Next time I shop for cars I’ll make sure I test drive a TFSI. Similar torque low down, and potential for similar CO2 if not MPG.

    renton
    Free Member

    I had a 54 plate 2.0tdci c max and that had the fluid stuff for the dpf.

    Worst car I ever had.

    All the talk about short journeys ruining your dpf…. I was doing 25k a year in mine down the motorway everyday and I still had EGR and DPF issues.

    I now drive an smax petrol.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    All the talk about short journeys ruining your dpf…. I was doing 25k a year in mine down the motorway everyday and I still had EGR and DPF issues.

    That’s cos you had some other engine fault.

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