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Does the EFI 5.0 need the egr spacer?

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    Does the EFI 5.0 need the egr spacer?

    I am wondering if the 5.0 EFI need the egr spacer to run properly? Or is it just emission BS. I am wanting to upgrade my intake and TB. but don't want to have to run the ugly EGR spacer.

    Tim
    84 Lincoln Town car signature, R.I.P
    85 Ford LTD Crown Victoria 2 door performance project
    89 Lincoln town car: RIP
    89 Crown Victoria LX 2002 USACi sound quality world champion RIP
    1990 Mercury Grand Marquis LS
    1994 Mercury Grand Marquis (sold)
    2004 Mercury Marauder. owned for a week then got screwed by the dealer

    #2
    well you could do an egr delet mustangs do iot all the time, might have a few issue though , last i checked gas mialeg suffers or somethign or other
    89 townie, mild exhuast up grades, soon to have loud ass stereo....

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by over2tonsofFun View Post
      I am wondering if the 5.0 EFI need the egr spacer to run properly? Or is it just emission BS. I am wanting to upgrade my intake and TB. but don't want to have to run the ugly EGR spacer.

      Tim
      There is also coolant running through the EGR spacer to prevent throttle shaft icing...unless it's a dedicated summer only car, I'd recommend leaving it there...if you do decide to do away with it, you'll have to find another way to mount your throttle cable bracket and at least need to keep the EGR sensor plugged in. I've heard some people complain of occasional pinging with the EGR deleted, I have yet to experience it myself.

      Good luck,
      Don
      '85 CV coupe- 351W, T5-Z, FAST Ez-Efi, shorty headers, 2.5" duals with knock off flowmasters, 2.5" Impala tails, seriously worked GT-40 irons, Comp 265DEH cam, 1.7rr's, Mallory HyFire 6A, Taylor ThunderVolt 50 10.4mm wires, 75mm t/b, 3G alt swap, 140mph PI speedo, PI rear sway bar, '00 PI booster/MC, 95-97 front spindles, '99 front hub bearings/brakes, '92-'94 front upper control arms/ball-joints, 3.73's with rebuilt traction-lok, '09 PI rear disc swap, '96 Mustang GT wheels with 235/55R17's.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by sick88tbird View Post
        if you do decide to do away with it, you'll have to find another way to mount your throttle cable bracket

        Good luck,
        Don
        This.

        You will have to fab up a delete plate that can house the mounting provisions for the throttle cable bracket and such.
        ~David~

        My 1987 Crown Victoria Coupe: The Brown Blob
        My 2004 Mercedes Benz E320:The Benz

        Originally posted by ootdega
        My life is a long series of "nevermind" and "I guess not."

        Originally posted by DerekTheGreat
        But, that's just coming from me, this site's biggest pessimist. Best of luck

        Originally posted by gadget73
        my car starts and it has AC. Yours doesn't start and it has no AC. Seems obvious to me.




        Comment


          #5
          You can buy a plug that tells the EEC that the EGR is always closed, this should alleviate your pinging. I'll let you know when I try it. When the EEC thinks the valve is open, it advances the timing and leans out the AFR's. It does this because the exhaust theoretically had no leftover fuel or oxygen in it, so it doesn't induce any combustion supporting oxygen to the intake charge. It's basically just taking up space. This has the effect of lowering the dynamic compression ratio, lowering exhaust temps, and because less fuel is injected per cycle, increases fuel economy in certain cases. I took the EGR off my '88 TBI 350 Chevy C1500 and noticed no difference in MPG and no pinging. I disabled it in my '98 GMCK1500 5.7L with EFILive and no difference in MPG. When the EGR valve opens, it has the effect of reducing the CID of your engine.
          1992 CVLX. 5.0 HO/GT40P/T5/3.73/trak-lok with bolt ons. 02 front CVPI setup, rear HPP setup, CVPI shocks around, F250 radiator, e-fans, and the power of 3G. 15.92@89mph, 2.4 60', 4700' elevation (5500' DA) with 3.08 open rear and the old oil chugging 289. RIP.

          Comment


            #6
            Its mostly required as a place to bolt the throttle cables to. Many of us don't run coolant to it, and a fair number have unhooked the EGR valve itself but the throttle cable bracket needs to hook to something. Honestly the EGR does no real harm. I've run it and not run it and as long as the system is working properly, I can't tell a damn bit of difference in how the motor performs.
            86 Lincoln Town Car (Galactica).
            5.0 HO, CompCams XE258,Scorpion 1.72 roller rockers, 3.55 K code rear, tow package, BHPerformance ported E7 heads, Tmoss Explorer intake, 65mm throttle body, Hedman 1 5/8" headers, 2.5" dual exhaust, ASP underdrive pulley

            91 Lincoln Mark VII LSC grandpa spec white and cranberry

            1984 Lincoln Continental TurboDiesel - rolls coal

            Originally posted by phayzer5
            I drive a Lincoln. I can't be bothered to shift like the peasants and rabble rousers

            Everything looks like voodoo if you don't understand how it works

            Comment


              #7
              I use a mustang egr delete plate, I had to do some mods to my throttle cable bracket and to the egr delete plate but it works great.


              '90 LX 5.0 mustang
              Big plans

              Comment


                #8
                EGR is benign, other than clutter and part failure. As far as I know, it doesn't operate at full throttle, and when at light/part throttle, it actually somewhat reduces pumping losses, thus increasing fuel economy at cruising while reducing NOx emissions.

                It almost qualifies as a something-for-nothing type of emission control device.
                1987 Ford LTD Crown Victoria 2-door Coupe - perpetually "sort of" for sale...
                Black with Red cloth (velour?) interior.
                Purchased on 10/10/2008, with only 70,386 original miles, and only ONE previous owner.
                Reader's Ride post, First pic with "new" rims, Other pics with "new" rims

                Comment


                  #9
                  I found this posted on corral.net. So, if you got a EGR code (31,32,33,34 or 35) and have crappy MPG, this might explain why.
                  This also applies to all you guys who think blocking off the EGR "improves" performance.

                  Quote:
                  "you shouldn't run the block-off unless you're either not running EGR or there's an alternate supply for it, because...

                  ...the fuel management strategy assumes the presence of a functioning EGR system and you'll get an overly lean part-throttle cruise if you block it off and don't have a chip tune to tell the computer not to...and when you have a lean part-throttle cruise, the EEC picks that information up from the O2 sensors and adds fuel. But it doesn't just add fuel to part-throttle cruise operation, it adds compensating fuel even during open-loop (non-O2-feedback) conditions such as startup, idle, and WOT.

                  Short story is since the EEC assumes a functioning EGR, and if you haven't instructed it otherwise, you're setting yourself up for rich running and resulting performance/driveability issues by blocking off its flow."
                  2003 Town Car Signature - 3.27 RAR, Dual exhaust and J-mod - SOLD 9/2011
                  89 Crown Victoria LX HPP -- SOLD 9/2010
                  88 Grand Marquis LS - The Original -- Totaled 5/2006


                  I rebuild AOD/AODE/4R70W/4R75E transmissions....Check out my Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/North...48414635312478

                  Comment


                    #10
                    awesome info.
                    sigpic


                    - 1990 Ford LTD Crown Victoria P72 - the street boat - 5.0 liter EFI - Ported HO intake/TB, 90 TC shroud/overflow, Aero airbox/zip tube, Cobra camshaft, 19lb injectors, dual exhaust w/ Magnaflows, Cat/Smog & AC delete, 3G alternator, MOOG chassis parts & KYB cop shocks, 215/70r/15s on 95-97 Merc rims

                    - 2007 Ford Escape XLT - soccer mom lifted station wagon - 3.0 Duratec, auto, rear converter delete w/ Magnaflow dual exhaust

                    - 2008 Mercury Grand Marquis Ultimate Edition - Daily driver - 4.6 2 valve Mod motor, 4R75E, 2.73s. Bone stock

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by 88grandmarq View Post
                      I found this posted on corral.net. So, if you got a EGR code (31,32,33,34 or 35) and have crappy MPG, this might explain why.
                      This also applies to all you guys who think blocking off the EGR "improves" performance.

                      Quote:
                      "you shouldn't run the block-off unless you're either not running EGR or there's an alternate supply for it, because...

                      ...the fuel management strategy assumes the presence of a functioning EGR system and you'll get an overly lean part-throttle cruise if you block it off and don't have a chip tune to tell the computer not to...and when you have a lean part-throttle cruise, the EEC picks that information up from the O2 sensors and adds fuel. But it doesn't just add fuel to part-throttle cruise operation, it adds compensating fuel even during open-loop (non-O2-feedback) conditions such as startup, idle, and WOT.

                      Short story is since the EEC assumes a functioning EGR, and if you haven't instructed it otherwise, you're setting yourself up for rich running and resulting performance/driveability issues by blocking off its flow."
                      Re-read your post, it'll cause you to run LEAN if you block the EGR and don't tell the EEC. It'll also advance the timing, so if you've already advanced it past stock you might encounter pinging. Here's my post again.


                      Originally posted by Crownvicman289 View Post
                      You can buy a plug that tells the EEC that the EGR is always closed, this should alleviate your pinging. I'll let you know when I try it. When the EEC thinks the valve is open, it advances the timing and leans out the AFR's. It does this because the exhaust theoretically had no leftover fuel or oxygen in it, so it doesn't induce any combustion supporting oxygen to the intake charge. It's basically just taking up space. This has the effect of lowering the dynamic compression ratio, lowering exhaust temps, and because less fuel is injected per cycle, increases fuel economy in certain cases. I took the EGR off my '88 TBI 350 Chevy C1500 and noticed no difference in MPG and no pinging. I disabled it in my '98 GMCK1500 5.7L with EFILive and no difference in MPG. When the EGR valve opens, it has the effect of reducing the CID of your engine.
                      1992 CVLX. 5.0 HO/GT40P/T5/3.73/trak-lok with bolt ons. 02 front CVPI setup, rear HPP setup, CVPI shocks around, F250 radiator, e-fans, and the power of 3G. 15.92@89mph, 2.4 60', 4700' elevation (5500' DA) with 3.08 open rear and the old oil chugging 289. RIP.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        well, you're both possibly right, and let me tell you why.

                        if the egr valve is opening and feeding a signal to the ECM that it opened, but it does not in fact have any flow, the engine runs lean and with more timing. if the EGR valve does not open, or it has an eliminator plug or something that feeds an always-closed signal, then the motor runs richer and with less timing. Thats not to say it runs richer than it needs to, but it runs richer than it would if the EGR system was working. This is part of why later EGR systems use a flow sensor and not simply a valve position sensor. With the position sensor, the valve can open, but the ports can be clogged (or blocked) and the ECM has no way of knowing it. It simply assumes all is cool as long as it sees that valve in the open position. With a flow sensor, the ECM can tell if there is actually exhaust gas moving through the valve and will adjust itself accordingly.
                        86 Lincoln Town Car (Galactica).
                        5.0 HO, CompCams XE258,Scorpion 1.72 roller rockers, 3.55 K code rear, tow package, BHPerformance ported E7 heads, Tmoss Explorer intake, 65mm throttle body, Hedman 1 5/8" headers, 2.5" dual exhaust, ASP underdrive pulley

                        91 Lincoln Mark VII LSC grandpa spec white and cranberry

                        1984 Lincoln Continental TurboDiesel - rolls coal

                        Originally posted by phayzer5
                        I drive a Lincoln. I can't be bothered to shift like the peasants and rabble rousers

                        Everything looks like voodoo if you don't understand how it works

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by Crownvicman289 View Post
                          Re-read your post, it'll cause you to run LEAN if you block the EGR and don't tell the EEC. It'll also advance the timing, so if you've already advanced it past stock you might encounter pinging. Here's my post again.
                          what I posted is a quote from Corral.net... it was part of a tech info thread made by a retired Ford engineer, who happens to be one of the top EEC-IV tuners in the country and also helped design the EEC-IV system.

                          it was my answer to the original posters question, "do you really need the EGR spacer for the engine to run properly" .... and correct answer is "YES"

                          *UNLESS* you have the ECM tuned properly to turn off the EGR functions in the programming, then you can delete the EGR spacer, valve and control solenoids.
                          2003 Town Car Signature - 3.27 RAR, Dual exhaust and J-mod - SOLD 9/2011
                          89 Crown Victoria LX HPP -- SOLD 9/2010
                          88 Grand Marquis LS - The Original -- Totaled 5/2006


                          I rebuild AOD/AODE/4R70W/4R75E transmissions....Check out my Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/North...48414635312478

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by sick88tbird View Post
                            There is also coolant running through the EGR spacer to prevent throttle shaft icing...
                            The coolant is there to cool the EGR spacer. Exhaust gasses are hot. It has zero to do with your throttle shaft.....

                            Comment


                              #15
                              maybe it does both?
                              2003 Town Car Signature - 3.27 RAR, Dual exhaust and J-mod - SOLD 9/2011
                              89 Crown Victoria LX HPP -- SOLD 9/2010
                              88 Grand Marquis LS - The Original -- Totaled 5/2006


                              I rebuild AOD/AODE/4R70W/4R75E transmissions....Check out my Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/North...48414635312478

                              Comment

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