Hi all,
Firstly, my apologies for the long post but I want to share as much as I can.
I have a 2019 Caravelle TDI BMT that has only done 53k miles. I've owned it over 2 years and until a month ago it was spot and never gave me any issues. Then I was coming back from dropping the eldest at Uni when the orange coil light came on flashing. Long and short of that issue is that it was diagnosed as needing 4 new injectors and a glow plug, fault code only showed issue on cylinder 2 but the VW specialist sent them away and had all 4 tested, the testing place said they were all dripping apparently (error codes were P067200 and P026600). I took a deep breath and swallowed this, paid for four new injectors and a glow plug.. ouch!
The van ran ok with no warning lights but only for 257 miles before I heard a loud pop and then the sound of rushing air under the dash. I suspected it was a hose so I pulled over and phoned the garage that done the injectors to see what they thought. They wanted to see the van and they suggested it would be ok to drive to them which was around 12 miles away. At this time no warning lights were on the dash. About 10 miles into the journey to the garage the coil light came on and the van entered limp mode, within another 3-5 miles it gradually lost power and eventually I had to pull over on the side of the carriageway (no b**dy hardshoulder!!
). I got recovered to the original garage and left the van with them to assess.
Next day I got a call saying that the exhaust is blocked and the engine cannot breath, this was confirmed by them taking the exhaust off the engine and it starting and running. The diagnosis is a blocked DPF. The cause I am told is a result of the original faulty (drippy) injectors, this blocked the DPF which in turn created too much pressure in the system causing the turbo hose to pop off, I am told the clip holding the turbo hose on is fine and as it should be.
The consequential costs to supply and fit a new DPF exhaust, plus diagnosis, plus, plus is similar to the cost of the extension Trump is putting on the White house!!
Its stressing me out big time as its a serious amount of money that we didn't budget for and its led me to many questions that I cannot answer and was hoping there may be someone who could offer some advice on here
.
1, Do you have to take the turbo hose off when replacing injectors or glow plugs? I am wondering if the hose clip was not secured correctly.
2, There was no coil light or other warning lights that were present when the hose came off the turbo. I am wondering if there would have been a warning light (coil or similar) if the DPF was blocked and creating that much back pressure. Would the turbo hose blow off with no warning lights on dash saying something is up?
3, Is it worth to get the DPF cleaned? The garage says that its never 100% and its better to buy new.
I read on here that if you run the engine with a turbo hose not connected the fuel mix will be wrong and cause the DPF to block...
So, its ultimately a question of chicken and egg? Did a blocked DPF (no light on dash) cause the turbo hose to blow off.. or.. did the turbo hose come off and this caused the DPF to block as I was driving to the garage?
And... is there anyway to prove either way?
Any help you can offer is super appreciated.
Thank you
Firstly, my apologies for the long post but I want to share as much as I can.
I have a 2019 Caravelle TDI BMT that has only done 53k miles. I've owned it over 2 years and until a month ago it was spot and never gave me any issues. Then I was coming back from dropping the eldest at Uni when the orange coil light came on flashing. Long and short of that issue is that it was diagnosed as needing 4 new injectors and a glow plug, fault code only showed issue on cylinder 2 but the VW specialist sent them away and had all 4 tested, the testing place said they were all dripping apparently (error codes were P067200 and P026600). I took a deep breath and swallowed this, paid for four new injectors and a glow plug.. ouch!
The van ran ok with no warning lights but only for 257 miles before I heard a loud pop and then the sound of rushing air under the dash. I suspected it was a hose so I pulled over and phoned the garage that done the injectors to see what they thought. They wanted to see the van and they suggested it would be ok to drive to them which was around 12 miles away. At this time no warning lights were on the dash. About 10 miles into the journey to the garage the coil light came on and the van entered limp mode, within another 3-5 miles it gradually lost power and eventually I had to pull over on the side of the carriageway (no b**dy hardshoulder!!
Next day I got a call saying that the exhaust is blocked and the engine cannot breath, this was confirmed by them taking the exhaust off the engine and it starting and running. The diagnosis is a blocked DPF. The cause I am told is a result of the original faulty (drippy) injectors, this blocked the DPF which in turn created too much pressure in the system causing the turbo hose to pop off, I am told the clip holding the turbo hose on is fine and as it should be.
The consequential costs to supply and fit a new DPF exhaust, plus diagnosis, plus, plus is similar to the cost of the extension Trump is putting on the White house!!
Its stressing me out big time as its a serious amount of money that we didn't budget for and its led me to many questions that I cannot answer and was hoping there may be someone who could offer some advice on here
1, Do you have to take the turbo hose off when replacing injectors or glow plugs? I am wondering if the hose clip was not secured correctly.
2, There was no coil light or other warning lights that were present when the hose came off the turbo. I am wondering if there would have been a warning light (coil or similar) if the DPF was blocked and creating that much back pressure. Would the turbo hose blow off with no warning lights on dash saying something is up?
3, Is it worth to get the DPF cleaned? The garage says that its never 100% and its better to buy new.
I read on here that if you run the engine with a turbo hose not connected the fuel mix will be wrong and cause the DPF to block...
So, its ultimately a question of chicken and egg? Did a blocked DPF (no light on dash) cause the turbo hose to blow off.. or.. did the turbo hose come off and this caused the DPF to block as I was driving to the garage?
And... is there anyway to prove either way?
Any help you can offer is super appreciated.
Thank you
