Andrew Prince
Well-Known Member
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- Feb 23, 2010
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It's all about how emissions are measured! Perfect combustion would mean that just about everything that comes out of the exhaust is water and CO2. Incomplete combustion means other products are formed mainly particulates (solid carbon products) and CO (carbon monoxide) being the primary culprits.Richard Jackaman said:On the subject of EGR I have to ask the question WHY?
Ok so it recycles exhaust gas back into the system to try to mininise emissions. But, and this is the odd part, you've already uses up all the oxygen in the gas first time through the cycle so your comprimising the combustion second time through. Just a thought.
Recycling the incompletely combusted products means that more of them are fully combusted to CO2, which is less bad than particulates and CO

In the mean time, as you point out, you're not feeding nice 100% fresh air-fuel mixture into your engine but partially burnt fuel too.
Where the picture gets murky is that diesel engines (without EGR or other emissions control systems) in particular are set-up to minimise production of particulates and CO. This setting is not optimal for max power production or even efficiency. Using an EGR system means that you can set-up the engine to produce more power because youcan ignore emissions to a large extent because you're partially recycling them. Yes, there is a power loss because the air-fuel mixture is partly compromised by recycling exhaust gases into the engine but the power increase due to the optimised settings is usually greater than the losses. So more power overall and emissions limits are obeyed.
The "trick" with removing your EGR is to produce more power (because you're now feeding in pure fresh air-fuel mixture) and not fall foul of emissions regulations, which are supposedly enforced by your friendly MOT tester

Hope that clarifies things a bit!