TractorNH
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2018
- Messages
- 641
- Location
- Southern NH
- Tractor
- Mahindra 2655 HST Cab, Deere 350C Dozer, Case 580CK TLB
It's an entirely passive system. There is no regen cycle. The dpf works kind of like a catalytic converter on an unleaded car. It gets heated up by the exhaust gas temperature, and there are chemical compounds inside the dpf filter that facilitate the burning or "cooking off" of the diesel exhaust particles. The slang term for this device is called a "soot cooker". There are no controls for this. There is a "data logger" that just looks at the incoming exhaust pressure, and the outgoing exhaust pressure, compares the two, and if they get too far apart (as in the dpf starts to get clogged), then it lights a light on your dashboard.
So is it actually a DPF or does it use a DOC like Mahindra? A DOC (Diesel Oxidation Catalyst) is what is like a catalytic converter used with a gas engine, constantly burning off the particles through temperature and the catalyst. A DPF (Diesel Particulate Filter) actually captures the particles and then the regen burns them off, sometimes by directly injecting diesel fuel into the filter as well.