if anybody is interested how the "defeat device" works, here's a nice video:
http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/2015/1 ... ode-video/
The video did explain that. Using too much adblue will create a toxic byproduct (was it ammonia?). Furthermore, VW would need to use that excessive amounts of adblue to keep within the limits that they can't stretch until the car has to take a service. They would need to refill it after perhaps as soon as 5000-8000km after the last service.djones wrote:So I understand most of the video above (51 min onward).
They are only using adblue when the car detects its in a test cycle.
Ok....
But why not just use the 'map' that activates it all the time?
What advantage is there in NOT using it?
http://www.forbes.com/sites/bertelschmi ... 913ffc1891Except that Daimler doesn’t call it a defeat device. In tests by Netherland’s official automobile inspector TNO on behalf on the Dutch Minister of the Environment, a C-Class Mercedes C220 TDi BlueTec was found emitting more than 40 times the amount of cancer-causing NOx than in the lab. After Dutch TV picked up the tough to ignore scent, the Stuttgart automaker complained that the tests were done at temperatures below 10 degree centigrade (50 F).
http://www.spiegel.de/auto/aktuell/merc ... 75185.html“There is, says Mercedes, a shut-off device in the engine management of its C-Class diesel cars that stops the NOx cleaning under these and other circumstances. This is for the protection of the engine, and permissible, says the Stuttgart automaker.“
Read the study instead of the article, the article gets most of it wrong anyway.djos wrote:Just more evidence showing that Diesel engines are completely unsuited to wide spread use in regular passenger vehicles!
In other words, these diesel engines have low emissions, except for NOx. As we can see, all cars are above the 80 mg/km limit in practice but we can also see that the worst car has more than four times the average NOx emissions than the best car.The test results of the sixteen tested vehicles show good CO, THC and PM10 real-world emissions because the applied technologies for controlling these emissions are intricately robust. In almost all conditions the emissions are low. However the real-world NOx emission of all vehicles varies from 0 to 2000 mg/km. Although the type approval emissions of all vehicles are below 80 mg/km, the average real-world NOx emission of all tested Euro 6 vehicles varies between 150 and 650 mg/km.
So, the NOx emissions are high because the emission reduction technologies aren't used to their full potential. Now, no one have been accused of cheating like VW did, rather this is the result of poor legislation which allow the manufacturers to optimize their cars for low emissions in the test and once outside the test cycle they can optimize their cars for other things like "engine protection" and low Ad-blue consumption.Some current Euro 6 vehicles have been equipped with DPF, EGR and SCR technologies and they have the potential to yield low real world emissions but the EGR and SCR technologies are only partly activated.
The study also points out that since a real-world emission test was introduced for heavy vehicle type approval the NOx emissions have rapidly declined. As other studies have found, a heavy truck can today actually have a lower real-world NOx emissions than a small diesel passenger car. This shows that legislation can have a large impact on real-world NOx emissions.However, in the on-road tests the pre-SCR NOx emissions are 2 to 5 times higher than in chassis dynamometer tests. This elevated NOx emissions before the SCR-catalysts is the main cause for the high vehicle emissions...