Also, FWIW the exhaust brake has no effect on regeneration aside from initially helping to warm the engine and emissions system up when the truck is cold started in cold climates. Nor does running the exhaust brake down steep grades.I snapped a pic of the last time this happened
View attachment 62550
I drove at highway speeds (75+) until completion - (less than 15 miles).
that was actually about two weeks ago - (Time flys)
It just happened again today - at 25% - I drove it until it completed - Less than 10 miles - engine brake on during long steep declines (mountains north of SLC)
Regeneration is all about flow, heat, and time.
You need good positive pressure (flow) through the system, you need heat (which comes in the form of either high EGT’s from placing a load on the engine (passive regeneration) or by injecting diesel into the exhaust stream (active regeneration), and you need a length of time where these factors can be applied inside the DPF. Ideal regeneration is going to occur at normal highway speed, on long stretches of uniform road, with little to no variations in throttle, and ideally pulling a trailer or carrying a load in the truck.

