I'm quite certain most of them are doing something like this, if not defeat devices, then coding the ECU so it knows its under test conditions etc, and modifying the engine performance accordingly.Shooty81 wrote:3 companies doing that doesn't mean all companies!SiLo wrote:The list is slowly building up then. I'm currently working for a large car manufacturer and have had people that work in engine development tell me that we don't do anything like this. I don't believe them and am waiting for most car companies to get caught with their pants around their ankles.
The irony that there is a big climate push going on at the moment regarding CO2 emissions as well...
Are you sure that is correct.Tommy Cookers wrote:outside the USA there is no legal prohibition of functionalities appearing to some as 'defeat devices'
VW has not broken any laws elsewhere
Tommy Cookers wrote:yes, you're right
chapter 1 article 3 - definitions
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/ ... 32007R0715
it prohibits 'that which reduces the effectiveness of the emission control system' (under normal vehicle use)
what constitutes 'reducing the ECS's effectiveness' ?
how have VW reduced the effectiveness of the ECS ? - (they haven't ?)
iirc not as good a 'catch-all' as the EPA dd clause
Such a definition would make almost every, if not every, emission control system a cheat device. Those systems are controlled (modulated) based on inputs from the sensors, and their effectiveness is being varied to achieve certain level of emission.Pieoter wrote:That is some serious selective quoting, the full text reads:
10. ‘defeat device’ means any element of design which senses temperature, vehicle speed, engine speed (RPM), transmission gear, manifold vacuum or any other parameter for the purpose of activating, modulating, delaying or deactivating the operation of any part of the emission control system, that reduces the effectiveness of the emission control system under conditions which may reasonably be expected to be encountered in normal vehicle operation and use;
(..)
and the say the 2.0 will just need a software update and it will not affect mileage or anything, if it was that easy why didn't they just do that from the start?jz11 wrote:so an air flow straightener will fix nox emissions, together with a remap, I just can't figure out why they didn't include the magnets on the fuel rail, that align the molecules properly
I guess they think that people are this dumb nowdays
https://www.volkswagen-media-services.c ... h=aur4bDiS
"Please note: The information contained in this press release does not apply to products and services from the Volkswagen Group of America or Volkswagen Canada."langwadt wrote:and the say the 2.0 will just need a software update and it will not affect mileage or anything, if it was that easy why didn't they just do that from the start?jz11 wrote:so an air flow straightener will fix nox emissions, together with a remap, I just can't figure out why they didn't include the magnets on the fuel rail, that align the molecules properly
I guess they think that people are this dumb nowdays
https://www.volkswagen-media-services.c ... h=aur4bDiS
If true it just re-enforces my complaint about other countries wanting the USA to further curb pollution.outside the USA there is no legal prohibition of functionalities appearing to some as 'defeat devices'
VW has not broken any laws elsewhere
Further proof of what I say.The problem has always been NA emissions - the European NOx regs are a piece of cake by comparison.