← Back to context Comment by noisem4ker 7 months ago Deleting the cat is straight up delinquency. 4 comments noisem4ker Reply technothrasher 7 months ago As is disabling the EGR system. ErroneousBosh 7 months ago EGR makes emissions worse. It was the wrong fix for the wrong problem.Diesel vehicles now have SCR and AdBlue, which fixes the problem properly, but they still have the EGR defect. jimnotgym 6 months ago Even if it makes the emissions test better? Which it can... jimnotgym 7 months ago If I tested my emissions using UK MOT standards before and after removing the cat and egr, and showed both an improvement and a pass, would that still be problematic for you?
technothrasher 7 months ago As is disabling the EGR system. ErroneousBosh 7 months ago EGR makes emissions worse. It was the wrong fix for the wrong problem.Diesel vehicles now have SCR and AdBlue, which fixes the problem properly, but they still have the EGR defect.
ErroneousBosh 7 months ago EGR makes emissions worse. It was the wrong fix for the wrong problem.Diesel vehicles now have SCR and AdBlue, which fixes the problem properly, but they still have the EGR defect.
jimnotgym 7 months ago If I tested my emissions using UK MOT standards before and after removing the cat and egr, and showed both an improvement and a pass, would that still be problematic for you?
As is disabling the EGR system.
EGR makes emissions worse. It was the wrong fix for the wrong problem.
Diesel vehicles now have SCR and AdBlue, which fixes the problem properly, but they still have the EGR defect.
Even if it makes the emissions test better? Which it can...
If I tested my emissions using UK MOT standards before and after removing the cat and egr, and showed both an improvement and a pass, would that still be problematic for you?