Your revs will always be around 1k whilst moving, I think there's a road speed sensor that keeps the revs up until you actually come to a stop.
Maybe it' the 1.6 but my engine runs fine when doing a passive regen, none of this lumpy tick over or rough running.
Never experienced anything like that with my 1.6 - never felt it do a regen, or had a DPF light in 11,000 miles. And yes I'm sure it's a TDI
In 10,000 miles I have noticed the car do one regen and in fairness it wasn't really any inconvinience. As far as my experience with a car fitted with a DPF goes, all I can say is "what DPF"
Driving up a 60MPH A road today on cruise at 60 mph, the car started to accelerate & decelerate as if the throtlle was being opened or closed. I guessed it was a passive regen, dropped the car into netral, sure enough tickover at 1000 rpm. The quicker I get this binned the better!
I have this problem on my fiesta 1.6TDCI (59 plate no dpf) found out the cause was the aircon compressor cutting in and out, which gives the symptoms as above and made it seem the car is lurching on the gas off the gas. it happened when the window was down then I heard the compressor clicking as it took power from the engine then click again as it disengaged, now when it happens I switch the climate off then back on and sorted.
Why is diesel fuel injected into the engine oil?On each regeneration or attempted regeneration, a certain diesel fuel amount is injected into the engine oil
How does a DPF regeneration use engine oil?ALWAYS, check your oil before any long journey, as DPF regeneration can use a fair bit of oil.
Was anyone asked if they were going to use it only for inner city driving before they bought it?Not recommended for sale in the Channel Islands and inner city driving.
A couple of questions about the original information supplied by Volkswagen Technical Support Specialist David Bodily.
Why is diesel fuel injected into the engine oil?
How does a DPF regeneration use engine oil?
It is becoming clear that I don't understand exactly what is going on during the DPF regeneration:
How it causes rough idling.
Why some people report it is a pig to drive during a regen.
Why the idle revs are 1000 to 1500 rpm.
How and why a regen uses egine oil.
Why diesel fuel is injected into the engine oil.
How much is the engine oil degraded by having diesel fuel injected into it.
How much is the engine life reduced by always running with diesel fuel in the engine oil.
How much diesel fuel is actually used during a regeneration.
How often should the regens happen.
Is the diesel fuel used by a regen measured and included in the trip computer calculations.
And finally:
Was anyone asked if they were going to use it only for inner city driving before they bought it?
does anyone know what the effect of re-mapping does to the DPF, Ive read that remapping the 2.0TDI CR can make it a bit more smoky so will it constantly be doing regens?? If so whats the point of the map as the regen's will make it a pig to drive and impossible to use the extra power??
Does anyone know how the DPF is checked. Does it have to be physically removed from the car before it can be checked?Every 180,000 km (120,000 miles)
Particulate Filters Check (TDi Common Rail engines).
A couple of questions about the original information supplied by Volkswagen Technical Support Specialist David Bodily.
The AA guy says that it sounds like the sensors were faulty and the car itself wasn't kicking in to clear the soot quickly enough