DDC: Regeneration no sweat

May 1, 2006
If Detroit Diesel Corp. (DDC) has its way, regeneration of the particulate filters for the 2007 engines will be unnoticeable, at least as far as drivers are concerned. In collaboration with Freightliner LLC, Detroit Diesel has been on an aggressive development and testing schedule for 2007, according to Tim Tindall, program director, and developing a procedure to manage regeneration of the required

If Detroit Diesel Corp. (DDC) has its way, regeneration of the particulate filters for the 2007 engines will be unnoticeable, at least as far as drivers are concerned. In collaboration with Freightliner LLC, Detroit Diesel has been on an aggressive development and testing schedule for 2007, according to Tim Tindall, program director, and developing a procedure to manage regeneration of the required filter system has been a big part of that schedule.

DDC's EPA 2007 efforts “are right on track for where we want to be,” he noted at a recent briefing. Since May of 2005, Tindall said the development team has logged more than 5-million test miles on Detroit Diesel's Series 60 engine and exhaust aftertreatment system and expects to have more than 14.8-million total test miles on that engine by January 2007.

During all those test miles, DDC has learned plenty about managing regeneration timing, fuel “dosing” of the system, insulation solutions, and the safety measures required. For starters, notes Joe Grycko, a member of DDC's Vehicle Performance Test Group and one of the people who has logged the most test miles on the new Series 60 engines and aftertreatment systems, regeneration is best done when the vehicle is under way, not stopped.

“If you are stopped during the regeneration process, we shut it down,” he says. “We also shut it down if the truck slows to below 20 mph, and we don't dose the system with fuel if the compression brake is on.

“Regeneration typically takes about twenty minutes total and requires about a gallon of diesel,” Grycko notes. “The temperatures during regeneration are very high, which is why we want to control when it can take place and why insulation of the system is important. The injector that delivers fuel to the filter is water-cooled, for instance and, right now, it looks like our best choice for insulation will be a double-walled pipe.”

Riding in a test truck during the regeneration process, it was impossible to tell by vehicle performance, heat, sound or even smell that anything special was going on at all. Only the computer, added to the test trucks to display data concerning aftertreatment system functions, gave any clue. In production trucks, a red light on the dash will tell the driver that temperatures in the particulate filter are hot enough to accomplish the regeneration cycle. An amber light will signal a problem.

“There will be a little learning curve for drivers, of course,” says Grycko, “but we've all worked very hard to make the entire transition to the 2007 Series 60 engines as easy and painless as possible.”

About the Author

Wendy Leavitt

Wendy Leavitt joined Fleet Owner in 1998 after serving as editor-in-chief of Trucking Technology magazine for four years.

She began her career in the trucking industry at Kenworth Truck Company in Kirkland, WA where she spent 16 years—the first five years as safety and compliance manager in the engineering department and more than a decade as the company’s manager of advertising and public relations. She has also worked as a book editor, guided authors through the self-publishing process and operated her own marketing and public relations business.

Wendy has a Masters Degree in English and Art History from Western Washington University, where, as a graduate student, she also taught writing.  

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