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Expected mpg improvement from EGR etc cleaning?

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by PriusNeckBeard, Jul 14, 2022.

  1. PriusNeckBeard

    PriusNeckBeard Active Member

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    @Mendel Leisk
    @JC91006

    My car has been doing some chugging, similar to all the complaints in other threads consistent with EGR clogging (and related areas in the vicinity of the EGR)
    My mechanic (who specializes in Prius's) says I have EGR clogging issues.
    No surprise after reading a few key threads -- mine has 150,000 miles and has never had any EGR work done.

    However, NOT a blown head gasket (no cold start severe rattling)

    He says, will clean many parts, including the EGR, replace a few gaskets, (also replace engine filter), $1,000.
    It's a service they recommend at 100k miles (but as I said, that wasn't performed on this vehicle).

    At first, the Mechanic (front desk person) said it would be cleaned 'as new'.
    When I asked specifically if MPG would return to normal, they said...well..there are so many factors that go into fuel mileage, can't promise anything, but we do 5 of these cleanings per week and people are satisfied.

    So now the MAIN QUESTION!
    Before I spend that money on the prius (vs selling it and buying something newer..) --

    What kind of gas mileage improvement can I expect, in general?


    With any luck..I can calculate the savings in gas over life of the car due to EGR work
    (vs not doing the repair and selling / taking a hit on re-sale price).

    (currently, MPG is like maybe 38 on freeway and like 31 for mixed freeway and some city).
    But it may be a bit worse. Especially city..

    FWIW, they already tested for misfiring by swapping out wires from 3rd to 4th spark plugs, and perhaps other tests, and determined there indeed was misfiring, and replace the coils and spark plugs, which was expensive.
    After that , SIGNIFICANLY less chugging BUT...still had the chugging (EGR, it seems), as well as poor gas mileage remained...

    Once again...am considering repair vs sell...!
     
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  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    any idea what you're mpg's used to be?

    he is correct, many things can affect gas mileage, but you should get some improvement.

    honestly, that's a dealers price, but at least he understands it and will hopefully be conscientious.

    and wouldn't you need it to stop chugging to sell for max dollars?
     
  3. PriusNeckBeard

    PriusNeckBeard Active Member

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    Not necessarily. it's kinda noticeable but not horrifying..
     
  4. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    I would possibly spend $400 to $500 to clean the intake manifold and EGR circuit. $1000 is really high. I don’t think this would improve your gas mileage either, that is more of a battery issue when the car age.
     
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  5. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    IIRC, @jerrymildred said EGR cleaning (through Tampa Hybrids, Florida) was $600 USD, for a comparison.

    EGR cleaning is not about mpg improvement; it's about saving your bacon, specifically: head gasket integrity. You're mechanics are right; 100K miles is the latest I'd do it.
     
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  6. CR94

    CR94 Senior Member

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    If the clogging is bad enough to noticeably affect the way the engine runs, cleaning will decrease fuel consumption, at least a little. However, as Mendel says, that's not the most important reason.
    If you don't want to spend the $1000, at least have the manifold passages cleaned, or do it yourself. That's the easy part of the clean-out, and possibly the most critical, if one manifold EGR port is badly clogged but the cooler isn't yet.
     
  7. jerrymildred

    jerrymildred Senior Member

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    $1k is a little steep. As @Mendel Leisk said, Tampa Hybrids charges $600. But if you've made it to 150k with an intact head gasket, you're doing pretty well. I would definitely advise cleaning the system.

    We do 6-12 a week. Sometimes as many as 15.

    As others said, cleaning that system will have little if any effect on fuel economy.

    It is easy to confuse misfires with a blown head gasket if you don't know what to look for. They feel similar, but the HG has some very clear telltales like various combinations of white exhaust smoke, steam cleaned piston tops, lost coolant, and/or milky oil.

    Cleaning the EGR won't heal a blown gasket, but it is necessary for the protection of the new gasket and it will prevent a blown HG if done before it gets too bad.
     
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  8. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    I experienced no mpg improvement after several egr cleanings. Plus no mpg drop prior to egr cooler cleaning even when the egr was completely clogged. The primary purpose of egr systems is to reduce emissions. Some think it may help to slightly reduce combustion chamber temperatures. Gen2 had no egrs and the latest Toyota hybrids have no egrs.

    An egr that is causing sluggish slow speed operation is stuck open without egr cooler clogging. Normally the egr valve is closed in low speed operation. The "Car Care Nut" youtube channel has a video (EGR) with a quick way to check for this. However this is rare compared to egr cooler clogging. Cleaning the cooler is a labor intensive job.

    However, a marginal hv battery will reduce mpg and cause sluggish off the line acceleration. But not as much as you are reporting, maybe 4 or 5 mpg. That is what I lost when the hv battery was weak and regained after the hv battery was replaced with new Toyota cells.

    Dragging brakes or really bad wheel bearings could cause additional mpg loss. Poor gas or high ethanol gas will reduce mpg as the system backs off the timing.

    A few isolated cases of extremely bad 12v batteries have caused lower mpg as the charging current became excessive for long periods. Usually the 12v battery will fail to start the car before this happens.



    EGR Kit mentioned in video
    C5150D5B-99C7-4D0E-9C13-F5271C1EAB0E.jpeg
     
    #8 rjparker, Jul 14, 2022
    Last edited: Jul 14, 2022
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  9. nicoj36

    nicoj36 Active Member

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    I noticed higher MPG after cleaning the EGR, Intake manifold, and throttle body. Maybe mine was really dirty and clogged prior to cleaning hence the higher MPG and better acceleration.
     
  10. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    While it may be fair to say that was originally and still the primary purpose, especially on diesel engines, it hasn't been the only purpose on spark-ignited gasoline engines, not since the engineers figured out the extra efficiency gains it could bring to the table for them. Ever since, they've been designing for those too.

    It really does reduce peak temperature of the burning mixture inside the combustion chamber. There's no question on that; the whole point of EGR for emissions is to bring that peak temperature down lower than where oxides of nitrogen form.

    Where there has been more discussion (on PriusChat anyway) is by just how much that changes the temperature of the combustion chamber, say, the upper cylinder walls and the head, which are bathed in thermostat-controlled coolant. By bringing the peak burn temperature down, EGR isn't releasing less heat from the fuel, only releasing it more slowly, over more of the power stroke.

    I've missed that news. Which ones?
     
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  11. CR94

    CR94 Senior Member

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    ChapmanF got it right, as usual.
    As far back as the early 1980s, Nissan, for one, was advertising reduced fuel consumption from the way they used EGR.
     
  12. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    Petrol hybrid available with new Toyota Crown Crossover
    2.4-liter turbocharged petrol hybrid engine producing 341 hp with four-wheel drive.
    Water cooled rear electric drive with separate inverter allows greater power to rear.

    T24A-FTS turbo I4 (TZSH35)
     
    #12 rjparker, Jul 15, 2022
    Last edited: Jul 15, 2022
  13. mjoo

    mjoo Senior Member

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    There's an impact on flame speed AND less heat. 20% reduction in oxygen contents (%EGR according to Toyota) results in 20% reduction in fuel due to the ECU targeting a stoichiometric air/fuel ratio. Less fuel = less heat & lower temperature of combustion gasses
     
    #13 mjoo, Jul 15, 2022
    Last edited: Jul 15, 2022
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  14. Joseph Artone

    Joseph Artone New Member

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    I always accelerate slowly and keep the gas over half full
     
  15. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    That's if you are comparing the engine at full output and no EGR to the engine at 80% output with 20% EGR, but that isn't realistic. If you were able to drive with 20% less fuel burn, that would be because you needed 20% less engine output, and if you didn't have EGR, the ECM would achieve the same result by further closing the throttle, and injecting the same 20% less fuel.

    In other words,

    The engine will produce a varying amount of output power depending on what the car needs in driving, up to its rated 105 kW maximum. Adding EGR doesn't change anything at that maximum load, because no EGR is used at maximum load. At max load, using a round 40% for engine efficiency, the engine is burning gasoline at a 263 kW rate (7.7 gallons per hour or so), making 105 kW usable mechanical output and 158 kW of heat.

    Intermediate loads are where EGR is used. Say you are driving in conditions that require 30 kW of output.

    With or without EGR, the engine will be producing 30 kW of output, because that's what the car is calling for. It has no choice.

    Using the same round 40% for engine efficiency, that will require it to burn gasoline at a 75 kW rate (around 2.2 gallons per hour), with 45 kilowatts being lost as heat.

    Without EGR, the ECM will achieve this reduced burn rate by reducing the throttle opening so less air/oxygen enters the engine. It will be the right amount of oxygen for 2.2 gph of fuel, and the ECM will inject 2.2 gph of fuel.

    With EGR, the ECM will be able to use a larger throttle opening, but also admit exhaust into the manifold, reducing the manifold vacuum, so less oxygen-bearing air enters. The rest will be exhaust gases, which (to first approximation) don't burn. The resulting mix still has the right amount of oxygen for 2.2 gph of fuel, and the ECM still injects the same 2.2 gph of fuel, which is still a 75 kW burn rate, producing the same 30 kW of usable power and the same 45 kW of waste heat. However, because of the effect on flame speed, this same amount of heat is released over a longer portion of the power stroke, and the peak temperature is lower.

    Less fuel = less heat and less engine output power. The ECM doesn't control how much output power is needed (the power management control ECU tells tells it how much is needed), so EGR only gives the ECM another way of reducing power to match the amount demanded. There will be no difference in the fuel burn rate or the total heat produced, except for any small difference in engine efficiency owed to the EGR itself.

    That's where I simplified slightly above. I used a round 40% for engine efficiency to simplify the math. But in the non-EGR case, the intermediate output is achieved with reduced throttle opening, higher manifold vacuum, and higher pumping loss, pulling the efficiency down. When EGR is used instead, there is less vacuum, lower pumping loss, and the efficiency will be closer to the magic 40%.

    Because of that slight efficiency edge, there will be slightly less fuel being burned in the EGR case, and therefore slightly less heat (just in that same proportion). Because the output power needed is determined by the driving conditions, and the only way to change the amount of fuel burned to produce the same output power is by changing the engine efficiency, there is no magic reduction in fuel consumed or total heat produced, except what you can chalk up to the marginal efficiency gain the EGR gives you.

    I also, as this post was long enough anyway, didn't go pulling efficiency factors at different engine loads from the BSFC graphs (which can also be found on this site). Of course the published graphs for the 2ZR-FXE show its efficiency with functioning EGR.
     
    #15 ChapmanF, Jul 15, 2022
    Last edited: Jul 15, 2022
  16. Grit

    Grit Senior Member

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    My yields 65 mpg per tank since occ install. Been posting actual photos of mdf trip meter on here for years
     
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  17. Joseph Artone

    Joseph Artone New Member

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    I wish it would be possible on a gen 2!!
     
  18. nicoj36

    nicoj36 Active Member

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    Is there an explanation for this? How would having an oil catch-can improve MPG?
     
  19. OptimusPriustus

    OptimusPriustus Active Member

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    Cooled EGR shows benefits for gasoline engines

    EGR (exhaust gas recirculation) systems now in use on diesel engines were used to meet emissions regulations. In gasoline engines, we think they are an ideal way to meet stricter fuel economy standards,” explained Martin Bauer, Development Director for engine-mounted components at Mahle Behr USA, in an interview with Automotive Engineering.”


    I noticed MPG improvement. After cleaning 51MPG (2000km with 54kmh average speed). Never reached that before
     
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  20. abdullah arslan

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    I wouldn't expect too much mpg improvement after cleaning. To me, a clogged egr causes mpg loss over hilly and mountainous roads. Specifically, when you are going up a hill, the car will blow less exhaust out due to gravity and it ll cause more stress on the engine

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.