I know that I'm bringing up a topic that has discussed and debated to death, but I can't find a solid answer to a question I have.
I understand that there are 3 basic types of DPF regeneration: Passive, which occurs when the exhaust temperatures are high enough to burn off accumulated soot (highway, towing); Active, which occurs when the engine injects extra diesel into the exhaust stream to burn off accumulated soot; Command-operated, which manually initiates an active regeneration with a diagnostic tool.
So here is my question: If a 6.7l Cummins owner is engaged in low-speed, near idle driving (think stop-and-go city traffic or 4wd low driving on a rough forest road) and a DPF alert on the dashboard indicates “Exhaust Filter XX% Full Safely Drive at Highway Speeds to Remedy,” will the DPF actively regenerate even if the driver continues at slow speeds? In other words, can the DPF actively regenerate even at very low speeds or near idle conditions?
I’ve got to believe that Ram built in some robustness to the emissions design which would accommodate different driving styles or real-world conditions. Or does Ram actually require you to end your current driving style and immediately get on the highway when that message appears?
The reason I ask, is that the Diesel Supplement for the Ram 1500 and 2500/3500’s is very vague on the subject. It basically says that when that message appears, you need to drive at highway speeds to allow the DPF to actively regenerate. But I also thought the whole reason Ram switched to SCR was to alleviate some of the DPF clogging issues that were present on the earlier Ram 6.7l’s?
Anyone have some factory literature on this subject?
I understand that there are 3 basic types of DPF regeneration: Passive, which occurs when the exhaust temperatures are high enough to burn off accumulated soot (highway, towing); Active, which occurs when the engine injects extra diesel into the exhaust stream to burn off accumulated soot; Command-operated, which manually initiates an active regeneration with a diagnostic tool.
So here is my question: If a 6.7l Cummins owner is engaged in low-speed, near idle driving (think stop-and-go city traffic or 4wd low driving on a rough forest road) and a DPF alert on the dashboard indicates “Exhaust Filter XX% Full Safely Drive at Highway Speeds to Remedy,” will the DPF actively regenerate even if the driver continues at slow speeds? In other words, can the DPF actively regenerate even at very low speeds or near idle conditions?
I’ve got to believe that Ram built in some robustness to the emissions design which would accommodate different driving styles or real-world conditions. Or does Ram actually require you to end your current driving style and immediately get on the highway when that message appears?
The reason I ask, is that the Diesel Supplement for the Ram 1500 and 2500/3500’s is very vague on the subject. It basically says that when that message appears, you need to drive at highway speeds to allow the DPF to actively regenerate. But I also thought the whole reason Ram switched to SCR was to alleviate some of the DPF clogging issues that were present on the earlier Ram 6.7l’s?
Anyone have some factory literature on this subject?