Green1 wrote:
good, no, normal, probably.
you'll never get rid of all of it, especially in high revving, or high load conditions. That said, many people on the UK site have noticed significant smoke after blanking the EGR, the reasoning as I understand it is that the fuel mixture is tuned with the expectation that the EGR is there, blanking it changes things, and as a result you also need to adjust the fuel mixture to compensate.
Although from thinking about it, the EGR is supposed to close under load at higher RPMs, so if anything, having a functioning EGR should require slightly *less* fuel and then only at lower RPMs when the valve is open (more exhaust = less O2 = less fuel needed).
And perversely, I was noticing tonight that the vacuum line to my now-blanked-off EGR was not coiling in a smooth circle. Turns out some bright spark in the far flung past had inserted the cutoff end of a nail about 2 inches up into the vacuum line, stealthily blocking it, so my EGR has never been working - unbeknownst to me. I guess the shaft seal finally gave way and started to leak.
But I digress - I guess I could always just plop a coupla washers on the wastegate actuator to bump up the boost and use that unburnt fuel a bit more, er - "productively"...

Or does the fuel delivery keep increasing with increased boost up to the max setting on the rear of the pump? $%^&&^!!!!!