mk4 cupra wrote
Note that Brickyard thread is from 2009, and quotes American sources. American diesel was originally very high in sulphur content, so much so that European engines had to be modified for the American market. The reason was partly to do with the source of the fuel, American crude was far richer in these compounds. Americans had some very bad experiences as their diesel's sulphur content was lowered which is where the idea of pouring things into the tank gained new followers.
Muttly the fact of a cat on the diesel engine getting blocked or damaged due to using two stroke oil ain't really a worry due to the cat on diesel engines are not really what we should call a cat it's more a sut cleaner.
No. You are completely wrong on this, and it is fundamental to the point I'm trying to make.
Diesel vehicles have had to have two-way, oxidation, catalysts for many years now. These are slightly less complicated than the three-way catalysts mandated for petrol cars, but are still catalytic converters. They catalyse the conversion of hydrocarbons (unburned or part-burned fuel) to water and CO2, and carbon monoxide to CO2. They don't do anything to particulates (Particulate Matter, PM or soot).
They are most certainly not a soot cleaner.
More recent engines have to have a Diesel Particulate Filter (DPF) fitted as well as the cat. The DPF traps soot particles. It has to get rid of them every so often or it clogs and requires expensive replacement. DPF's get rid of the soot by "regeneration". At a suitable speed (motorway or A-road cruising), the ECU changes the fuel-air mix so that there is excess air in the exhaust, and the DPF burns the soot particles to CO2. It's this requirement to regenerate the DPF that is directly responsible for the appearance of lambda probes in diesel exhausts, where there were none before.
So your diesel car either has a catalytic converter, or a diesel particulate filter + a catalytic converter.
The cat on my tdi is a completely diffrent internal construction comperd to its petrol counter part.
As I said above, it's a two-way catalyst not a three-way, but that has little to do with how it's constructed. A diesel catalyst will have a different mechanical construction for a number of reasons, including the fact that exhaust gas volumes on a turbo-diesel car will be much higher than those on a non-turbo petrol car.
Myself from what I have read up and tests I hve carried out I have not found any reason it would or will damage my cat. I have smoke tested it with the 2 stroke oil mix and without the mix and with the two stroke oil mix my emissions where a lot lower.
It's good to test these things out for yourself rather than just follow the latest fashion. Your *smoke* may have been visibly lower. Your emissions (Phosphorus oxides, SO2, HC, CO) were higher, because the oil contains contaminants that have to be removed from diesel fuel, by law. Of course, these gases are invisible and the amount of them present in the exhaust gas is difficult to measure even with specialised and expensive equipment.
Two stroke oil is meant to be burned in petrol engines, which have a higher combustion temperature, so the oil will contribute a small amount of extra CO, HC and soot.
The majority of the soot particles in a diesel exhaust are microparticles and can't be seen as a black sooty cloud, only as a light haze in extreme cases. They are demonised as carcinogens by Californian environmental agencies who are following their own agendas.
The "typical smokey diesel exhaust" is the result of overfuelling. This can be completely eliminated, for a clean-looking exhaust, in modern cars with their fine injectors and computer control, but environmental paranoia mandates that we must also minimise NOx, Nitrogen Oxide production. This is what the EGR system does, and it makes smoke while it's in action.