- Joined
- Nov 3, 2019
- Messages
- 2,423
- RV Year
- 2022
- RV Make
- Newmar
- RV Model
- London Aire 4551
- RV Length
- 45
- Chassis
- Spartan
- TOW/TOAD
- 2020 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon
Met a guy that has a 2019 Ventana. He has owned it since new, but rarely makes trips over 100miles. Lots of short weekend trips with extended periods of sitting.
With 14k miles on an extended trip this summer he had a full derate just outside of Helena MT.
After a week of trouble shooting they decided to drop the SCR/DPF system.
Opening up the 2 halves this is what was found.
This is a result of never driving the coach long enough to complete a regen.
For some reason the sensors are saying the DPF is clear yet it is fully clogged. A bunch of codes that indicate pressure variance etc are being thrown, but none of them indicate a full derate.
This is where things get interesting. After a bit of research and a few phone calls, he decided to chisel the DPF to remove the entire contents. It is now just a shell.
He has connected it back in place and disconnected all sensors. A tech came out with a laptop running insite and spent 30 minutes recoding and now the engine thinks it doesn’t have DEF,DPF, or sCR.
I left after they started it but before they took a test drive. The startup sound is amazing for a sports car guy, with the turbo whine clearly audible.
He is due to arrive at the campground I am near later this week so I will have more details and hopefully some audio.
First delete I have witnessed on a modern RV.
With 14k miles on an extended trip this summer he had a full derate just outside of Helena MT.
After a week of trouble shooting they decided to drop the SCR/DPF system.
Opening up the 2 halves this is what was found.
This is a result of never driving the coach long enough to complete a regen.
For some reason the sensors are saying the DPF is clear yet it is fully clogged. A bunch of codes that indicate pressure variance etc are being thrown, but none of them indicate a full derate.
This is where things get interesting. After a bit of research and a few phone calls, he decided to chisel the DPF to remove the entire contents. It is now just a shell.
He has connected it back in place and disconnected all sensors. A tech came out with a laptop running insite and spent 30 minutes recoding and now the engine thinks it doesn’t have DEF,DPF, or sCR.
I left after they started it but before they took a test drive. The startup sound is amazing for a sports car guy, with the turbo whine clearly audible.
He is due to arrive at the campground I am near later this week so I will have more details and hopefully some audio.
First delete I have witnessed on a modern RV.