I haven't gone into regen in over 330 hours of operation. That's somewhere's over 13K miles for me. Does that have something to do with the "sims" in my EGT sensors???
You might be off a few degrees other than 100 F. First I will say that with my laptop reading the factory egt's the factory sensors see higher then the 1285 F that you are referring to when I pull a heavy load up a long grade.
Cracking is more pronounced in severe temperature changes that is why most dpf's are internally wrapped to retain some heat and temper cooldown. Next you could say well you will melt it but we are hundreds of degrees away from that point, double your regen temperature then you will melt it. In order to see this you are going to have more problems than a DPF.
The OEM engineers had to design the system to operate at long hard pulls, regen and shut down in Alaska sub-zero temperatures and to be able to do the same long hard pulls in the southwest where temps can get well above a hundred degrees. They also had to consider dpf exposure temperature required for regeneration, max egt temps that could be experienced in max towing, max egts with regen, environmental conditions and they also had to design the dpf to withstand this daily. Plus they also had to consider a cushion factor to be designed in.
I do have more information from work but it comes in "a corporate protected" documents that I cannot not release. The above info was all prior released information by the OEM's but this should suffice to answer the temperature concerns as they have come up before.
I haven't gone into regen in over 330 hours of operation. That's somewhere's over 13K miles for me. Does that have something to do with the "sims" in my EGT sensors???
the way I was told,idle time is anytime the throttle is closed. just my 2cents.