I know what you mean - we drove back from the T6F New Year camp earlier this week and right at the end of the 90 minute journey home the van decided to do a regen.Is it possible to start regeneration by pressing a button? Some times when you go on a long drive you know it will take 2h of drive why not make regeneration then...
VCDS programing + button?
Is it possible to start regeneration by pressing a button? Some times when you go on a long drive you know it will take 2h of drive why not make regeneration then...
VCDS programing + button?
Yes. It works fine. But I just use Carista to monitor soot levels and take it for a longer drive when needed.Has anybody tried starting DPF regeneration by OBD CARISTA true the phone app?
Carista
blog.caristaapp.com
I see here that it is possible. Thank you
Is it possible to start regeneration by pressing a button? Some times when you go on a long drive you know it will take 2h of drive why not make regeneration then...
VCDS programing + button?
It doesn’t matter what gear, it’s the Revs. Needs to be 2000rpm+ to get hot.My T6.1 keeps saying too much engine oil. Apparently due to turning the engine off during a regen. According to VW technician I need to drive in 4th gear for 10mins to do a manual regen, this will take the excess fuel away that has been collected for the initial regen that was stopped.
The technician said the engine dumps more fuel in , and because the regen hasnt completed it raised the engine oil level. That’s why I have engine oil too high?It doesn’t matter what gear, it’s the Revs. Needs to be 2000rpm+ to get hot.
The link to engine oil makes no sense to me. During a regen more fuel is put in along with some other magic done by the ecu to get the engine hot. It’s the heat (~600c) that burns the soot off in the dpf.
I have read about engine oil issues before, but don’t recall seeing an explanation as to why, so would be keen to understand the link.
Fuel bit is correct, but the rest doesn’t add up.The technician said the engine dumps more fuel in , and because the regen hasnt completed it raised the engine oil level. That’s why I have engine oil too high?
I’m not mechanical at all, so nothing makes Sense to me haha
I will check this tomorrow, but vehicle is only done 1k miles, but I’ve been doing short journeys recently.There have been instances with some manufacturers that so much fuel is dumped into the cylinders, that it doesn’t all get burnt, and finds its way into the sump (diluting the oil), and raising the level of the “oil” in the sump.
Mazda in particular had an engine that did this.
I assume this is what is being referred to.
My question would be is the oil level actually too high or is the level sensor faulty. This is easy to check on the dipstick.
Pete
You can do it with obd eleven too, I find it better to plug in and monitor the soot levels like @huw169 mentions above.I see you need to buy CARISTA app to get this function unlocked
Sounds interesting and equally disturbing. I get that fuel could run down through the piston ring gaps, but that would need to be excessively over fuelling, and outside of the combustion point. Is the end point to get uncombusted fuel into the exhaust system and let the heat ignite it so the dpf internals are basically on fire?There have been instances with some manufacturers that so much fuel is dumped into the cylinders, that it doesn’t all get burnt, and finds its way into the sump (diluting the oil), and raising the level of the “oil” in the sump.
Mazda in particular had an engine that did this.
I assume this is what is being referred to.
My question would be is the oil level actually too high or is the level sensor faulty. This is easy to check on the dipstick.
Pete
I think the end point as you describe it will be a catastrophic lubrication failure due to fuel dilution of the engine oil.Sounds interesting and equally disturbing. I get that fuel could run down through the piston ring gaps, but that would need to be excessively over fuelling, and outside of the combustion point. Is the end point to get uncombusted fuel into the exhaust system and let the heat ignite it so the dpf internals are basically on fire?