View Full Version : EGR blanking plate
worane
17th April 2013, 06:43 PM
I have just bought an Erg blanking plate from the UK but have no idea what to do with it.
Do we have a tutorial on the forum on what to do to fit it?
It has no gasket or anything with it.
Disco EMU
17th April 2013, 07:00 PM
Let me google that for you (http://lmgtfy.com/?q=LandRover+Discovery+2+EGR+AULRO)
or
www.discovery2.co.uk /workshop - EGR removal (http://www.discovery2.co.uk/egr.html)
Pretty easy job ... even for me ;)
frostyblue
17th April 2013, 09:23 PM
1/2 hour job, very easy to do, i followed the uk site but is really self explaining
Cheers
Ken
worane
18th April 2013, 07:07 AM
Bummer, Looks like I should have asked my question before I bought the blanking plate.
What I should have bought was the whole kit with the metal pipe and the plate.
Have to get back on the web. May try Roverlord first.
Thank you everyone for your guidance once again.
Regards Nick.
janousek
18th April 2013, 07:30 AM
Make sure u get the right kit. D2a 03/04 requires 3 blanking plate. Pre 2003 requires only one. There is detailed instruction in alivetuning web site.
Rgds
OffTrack
18th April 2013, 07:39 AM
The single blanking plate is designed for a "stealth" deEGR. You put the blanking plate between the exhaust manifold and the EGR pipework that runs across the front of the engine. This stops exhaust gases entering the EGR system, which is the main point of the deEGR.
You'd probably want to give the EGR valve itself a good clean out to remove gunk, and then disconnect the wiring harness from the EGR Modulator which stops the valve operating.
That will give you the same effect as installing the deEGR pipework but possibly with marginally reduced airflow vs a plain pipe however I doubt this will make any significant difference.
If you deEGR this way it is simple to reinstate to an operational system if you get pinged on it when selling the vehicle.
cheers
Paul
worane
18th April 2013, 12:37 PM
Thanks Offtrack, that seems to make a lot of sense. That is the way to go I feel.
Slunnie
18th April 2013, 12:50 PM
The single blanking plate is designed for a "stealth" deEGR. You put the blanking plate between the exhaust manifold and the EGR pipework that runs across the front of the engine. This stops exhaust gases entering the EGR system, which is the main point of the deEGR.
You'd probably want to give the EGR valve itself a good clean out to remove gunk, and then disconnect the wiring harness from the EGR Modulator which stops the valve operating.
That will give you the same effect as installing the deEGR pipework but possibly with marginally reduced airflow vs a plain pipe however I doubt this will make any significant difference.
If you deEGR this way it is simple to reinstate to an operational system if you get pinged on it when selling the vehicle.
cheers
Paul
Not that it affects me, but can the valve be removed in the stealth setup?
OffTrack
18th April 2013, 01:11 PM
Not that it affects me, but can the valve be removed in the stealth setup?
From the pics on UP's site it looks like the valve is in the bottom of the pipe assembly and is closed to prevent entry of the exhaust gases. The only thing you could do that might be worthwhile is remove the rod between the vacuum unit and the valve, but then you'd have to start blocking holes. I don't know if it would make any real difference.
cheers
Paul
worane
18th April 2013, 01:52 PM
Offtrack one other thought. Will I have any problems with the computer if I just disconnect the EGR wiring?
OffTrack
18th April 2013, 03:05 PM
No. You'll get a couple of faults relating to the egr and the ECU stops trying to control the EGR system.
worane
19th April 2013, 07:37 AM
SWEET!
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