TBI Throttle Body Injection discussion and questions. L03/CFI tech and other performance enhancements.

egr

Old Nov 10, 2003 | 09:23 AM
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2kickassbirds's Avatar
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From: Tucson
Car: 1991 firebird formula
Engine: 5.8
Transmission: 700r4
Axle/Gears: 3.42
egr

How does the egr work and is it required for Emissions. How can I get rid of it.
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Old Nov 10, 2003 | 10:53 AM
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From: Cincinnati, OH
Car: '90 RS
Engine: 377 LSX
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There is a valve that allows some exhaust gasses to be re-circulated into the intake and it goes through the combustion cycle again. It shuts off when you go WOT. Others will chime in on when it is present and not present. I am just giving the general outline of it. It helps cool the engine a bit and it reduces certain pollutants (can't remember off hand which ones or how cool). It is necessary for emmisions although I know of people who have passed without it. The only correct way to remove it is to have it removed from your chip. This requires a custom burn. Actually you re-set it to come on at like 250 mph or something rediculous that your car will never see.
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Old Nov 10, 2003 | 03:47 PM
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Contrary to popular belief, it is a good device. If you go here, you can read everything you ever wanted to know about them, but here’s the basic answer to what you asked.

The purpose of the exhaust gas recirculation process was to simply put a small, carefully metered amount of exhaust gas back into the combustion chamber. Exhaust gas has already spent its fuel, so to speak, and is considered an inert gas and will not support combustion. This precise amount of recirculated inert gas slows the burning process in the combustion chamber where NOx is produced. Slowing the burning process lowers the temperature during combustion, thereby reducing or eliminating nitrogen oxide production. This action is most needed during cruise conditions and not at idle or heavy throttle conditions. Some may still incorrectly believe that the EGR is supposed to recycle the exhaust gas - burning it twice must be enough to reduce emissions, right? Wrong.

We just said the exhaust gas won't support combustion - it's already been burned. So, the main purpose? Reduce NOx. The side benefits? Better fuel economy for one, and maybe performance as well. Consider some of the advanced strategies for EGR flow control on some of the later engine applications. The inert exhaust gas actually displaces a small amount of space in the combustion chamber, which in turn reduces a small amount of volume that the air/fuel charge occupies. This can have an effect on fuel economy, albeit slightly, if the EGR valve is malfunctioning.
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Old Nov 10, 2003 | 04:57 PM
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thanks for the explanation, i had never really known anything about them......yay, i learned something today
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