Fig.1 was a typical capture recorded on road test under light cruise which is the optimum condition if you want to force EGR. On CHB we see the ECM requesting the valve to open by applying a VPW (Variable Pulse Width) to ground, and then we see the pintle position change on CHC until a pre-programmed value is reached as set by the ECM according to the driving conditions. The MAP value on CHD offers a view of how EGR is affecting fresh air intake. Although the EGR being open is adding to the MAP value achieved here, the main contributor is normal driving load. Correlating MAP (airflow) with EGR can be a useful diagnostic tool. After two consecutive road tests the car seemed fine. With not much to go on I sifted through each and every recorded capture looking for…something. Towards the beginning of one drive trip I picked out a brief valve opening.
This has the hallmark of a purge check and is clearly a programmed ECM activation. Also, looking at the MAP value during this event, the engine was in deceleration so a brief opening had little benefit for combustion and emission purposes. We see the ECM pull the valve control circuit to ground, forcing the EGR pintle to fully extend (open), and a good extended position is measured and in quick response. During the pintle open phase, the MAP value correctly reacts to a manifold pressure loss making the value rise slightly. When the ECM releases its ground pulse we expect to see the pintle return to closed position with a good response time; but a discrepancy of 230 ms is visible between the ECM releasing the ground path and the pintle actually starting to close. Comparing this to its opening response, where the pintle has to first work against an internal return spring yet still manages a response time of 16 ms, a closing response of 230 ms is evidence that the pintle is sticking. This now becomes a likely area and worthwhile pursuing further. The scan tool used offers an Actuator Test for this EGR valve and several forced activations appeared to show the valve working fine under static conditions, so it seemed that this was only going to fail on the road.
A subsequent road test did eventually flush out the problem. We see the same conditions present as before during deceleration when the ECM allowed a purge check - CHB. With the valve activated, its pintle position CHC correctly reports full extension, but the pintle hangs at fully open when the ECM has already released the valve. We can also determine that the pintle is actually open (as opposed to an erroneous position sensor) from the MAP value CHD also hanging high throughout.
Fig.4 is a continuation of the same fault period and shows that the pintle took some time before it returned to closed position, and during the fault engine performance suffered typically with poor acceleration and hesitation. The vehicle speed didn’t drop low enough to enter idling but it’s fair to say that the idling parameters would struggle to keep this going - our customer’s complaint. Verifying the repairWith a new EGR valve installed the closing response time fell to about 25 ms.
Final commentsThere were no trouble codes logged with this particular fault, so I suspect that the fault detection strategy relied on consecutive fault events within a single drive-cycle. Also, in this case the electrical operating thresholds — open circuit, short circuit, excessive current draw, or a poor power supply — were not exceeded. Here the problem was more one of operational performance, where a control unit would need to evaluate before assigning a DTC, and often this means relying on specific conditions to be met first. It does highlight a dilemma: how much of a faultfinding process should hang on a DTC appearing?
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