Looking likely that the some part of my EGR system is going to need changing, now the emissions warning light is permanently on.
Since is a 2018 204ps CXEB engine, I'm paranoid that throwing away a large fee on the EGR is a waste, if the engine block is going to need changing.
Am I causing extra damage to the engine if the EGR value is blocked or not working?
A bit of background:
2018 204ps 4 Motion DSG.
CXEB engine.
Had from 6 months old.
Now cover 56,000 miles.
During nearly 6 years of ownership, it's always consumed oil, especially on long journeys with a loaded van. I even carry a bottle of oil in the door pocket, which I've had to do with all the 2.0L diesel VAG cars I've owned. Oil usage was mentioned to VW all the way through it's extended 4 year warranty period, with the normal bollox VW answer "its's well within the VW tolerance for that engine of 1L per 600 miles".
Once out of warranty, it's been serviced etc by a very good local independent VAG garage. Knowing the issues with these engines, we always mention the oil usage to them, but they never raised a concern, he had a good look round during the cam belt change last year, to see if he could see any other issues with oil leakages and changed the crank seal as it looked a bit damp.
So fast forward to 6 weeks ago, annual service, one of mechanics/owners mentioned that he'd cleared a load of intermittent faults logged in the ECU (EGR, Throttle Body, Barometric pressure sensor, etc), we'd not had any dash warning lights, so he said keep an eye on it. A week later the Emissions warning light came on, which they cleared only to come back on another week after that.
Knowing about the CXEB engine and EGR issues from this forum, I went back to discuss replacing the EGR etc, they said monitor the oil usage over the next few months, if it remains consistent, they would replace the EGR etc, if it was getting worse then it would need an engine block rebuild in the future (they are doing 1 a month at the moment), so I'd be wasting my money on a replacement EGR system, as if it had cylinder bore damage, it would knacker the new EGR anyway.
I've never monitored the oil usage, but since the last oil warning light & approx 1L top up, it's now done 1,100 miles and counting.
So back to my original question - What is being damaged by driving with Emissions warning light ON (except for possibly the environment)?
Since is a 2018 204ps CXEB engine, I'm paranoid that throwing away a large fee on the EGR is a waste, if the engine block is going to need changing.
Am I causing extra damage to the engine if the EGR value is blocked or not working?
A bit of background:
2018 204ps 4 Motion DSG.
CXEB engine.
Had from 6 months old.
Now cover 56,000 miles.
During nearly 6 years of ownership, it's always consumed oil, especially on long journeys with a loaded van. I even carry a bottle of oil in the door pocket, which I've had to do with all the 2.0L diesel VAG cars I've owned. Oil usage was mentioned to VW all the way through it's extended 4 year warranty period, with the normal bollox VW answer "its's well within the VW tolerance for that engine of 1L per 600 miles".
Once out of warranty, it's been serviced etc by a very good local independent VAG garage. Knowing the issues with these engines, we always mention the oil usage to them, but they never raised a concern, he had a good look round during the cam belt change last year, to see if he could see any other issues with oil leakages and changed the crank seal as it looked a bit damp.
So fast forward to 6 weeks ago, annual service, one of mechanics/owners mentioned that he'd cleared a load of intermittent faults logged in the ECU (EGR, Throttle Body, Barometric pressure sensor, etc), we'd not had any dash warning lights, so he said keep an eye on it. A week later the Emissions warning light came on, which they cleared only to come back on another week after that.
Knowing about the CXEB engine and EGR issues from this forum, I went back to discuss replacing the EGR etc, they said monitor the oil usage over the next few months, if it remains consistent, they would replace the EGR etc, if it was getting worse then it would need an engine block rebuild in the future (they are doing 1 a month at the moment), so I'd be wasting my money on a replacement EGR system, as if it had cylinder bore damage, it would knacker the new EGR anyway.
I've never monitored the oil usage, but since the last oil warning light & approx 1L top up, it's now done 1,100 miles and counting.
So back to my original question - What is being damaged by driving with Emissions warning light ON (except for possibly the environment)?