Definitely sucks. Were those 38miles putting around town in traffic or on the highway?
Definitely sucks. Were those 38miles putting around town in traffic or on the highway?
Obviously something(s) upstream of the DPF is the issue. Frequent regen and plugged DPF are consequences.1/2 in town other half 60mph on freeway lol
Obviously something(s) upstream of the DPF is the issue. Frequent regen and plugged DPF are consequences.
Curious what your vibration is? I'm not getting knocking, but starting to hear tapping like lifters are having issues.Yeah dealership and I think its over fueling. It would explain my vibration and intermentent knocking. They won't replace the PCM or do a new flash. RAM cut off doing diagnostics so we wait for check engine light.
Curious what your vibration is? I'm not getting knocking, but starting to hear tapping like lifters are having issues.
Talked to the dealership today. They ordered a new DPF (said they have 6 on order), but could be over a month out. Said there is a chance I can still drive it in the interim? Supposed to call me back tomorrow.Dropped it off today. Service guy claims there are a lot of '22's with "bad" DPFs. They are supposed to call back Monday, but most likely will replace DPF.


The “wrong” air filter isn’t guaranteed to drop the time between regen cycles sufficiently to where the P2459 code sets. In my truck, with the wrong air filter, I was down to a few hundred miles and several hours between regen cycles. Way more often than it needed to be, but nowhere near short enough on the intervals to create the time constraints necessary to trigger P2459I had a thought, if someone is having the issue like I was where my truck is doing a regen every 200ish miles and 3-4 engine hours but not throwing the excessive regen code. Couldn’t you try putting in the wrong air filter until it throws the code? Then put the correct one back in and bring it to the dealer?
Maybe an idea for people having this issue and not wanting to take care of it themselves
Mine was doing a regen daily for a few days, maybe 30 miles between, before it threw the code.I had a thought, if someone is having the issue like I was where my truck is doing a regen every 200ish miles and 3-4 engine hours but not throwing the excessive regen code. Couldn’t you try putting in the wrong air filter until it throws the code? Then put the correct one back in and bring it to the dealer?
Maybe an idea for people having this issue and not wanting to take care of it themselves
Posted the above on November 7. Over the next three weeks without Archoil, the truck regened at 40 miles, 70 and the most recent at 99 miles. The last Regen threw the P2459 code. But, I had just hooked up to my RV to head to the smokies for Thanksgiving 11/27. The truck regened normal while towing. Gone for 4 days... just got back last night. Wouldn't you know it the code turned off on its own. I'm currently sitting at 1000 miles and 23.57 hours. It might do a timed regen... but even that is iffy. On my way to work the DPF gauge went from 0 to 1/4 full in 12 miles.Here is a fun status... 22 3500 HO with the frequent Regen issue... averaging 160 miles between Regen unless towing. This is with using Archoil over the past 8 months.
Pulled a 16,000lb fifth wheel from Indiana to Florida... 1000 miles... was able to get a 24 hour Regen.
Pulled it home.... and did not add Archoil at my first filll up (about 100 miles into the trip home and was at 1/4 tank). Stopped for the night after 400 miles. Started up the next morning... pulled 15 miles and instantly went from 0 on the DPF gauge to 50% and hit a Regen. Finished within 15 minutes and stayed at 0 on the gauge the rest of the way home.
Got home... unhooked.... next day drove to work... within 10 miles went from 0 to 50% on the guage and triggered a Regen. I'm going to leave the Archoil out for the next month or so to see if I can get the MIL to come on.
The code cleared because the average time between your regeneration cycles expanded with the towing drive cycles and the passive regeneration that comes with it. If your dashboard gauge increased 25% in 12 miles, it’s very likely whatever issue the truck had prior has returned due to the lack of higher EGT’s and passive regeneration. If the system is working as intended and the truck is operating “cleanly” there should never be a point at which the truck legitimately raises soot load that fast. I suspect your regen cycles will likely continue to move closer together and eventually trigger the code again. It would be interesting to see what your DPF % REG data was prior to finishing the towing and then compare that to where you are now. Do you have an iDash or other aftermarket monitor installed?Posted the above on November 7. Over the next three weeks without Archoil, the truck regened at 40 miles, 70 and the most recent at 99 miles. The last Regen threw the P2459 code. But, I had just hooked up to my RV to head to the smokies for Thanksgiving 11/27. The truck regened normal while towing. Gone for 4 days... just got back last night. Wouldn't you know it the code turned off on its own. I'm currently sitting at 1000 miles and 23.57 hours. It might do a timed regen... but even that is iffy. On my way to work the DPF gauge went from 0 to 1/4 full in 12 miles.
My next trip with the RV isn't until the 25th of December... We will see if it retriggers the code between now and then.
OH and by the way...after we got to our campsite and unhooked the truck did great in the mountains. It would passively Regen while driving up and down the Cherokee pass in 25 degree temps.
mbarber84.... I don't have an iDash... just using a odb2 dongle with OBD Fushion app.The code cleared because the average time between your regeneration cycles expanded with the towing drive cycles and the passive regeneration that comes with it. If your dashboard gauge increased 25% in 12 miles, it’s very likely whatever issue the truck had prior has returned due to the lack of higher EGT’s and passive regeneration. If the system is working as intended and the truck is operating “cleanly” there should never be a point at which the truck legitimately raises soot load that fast. I suspect your regen cycles will likely continue to move closer together and eventually trigger the code again. It would be interesting to see what your DPF % REG data was prior to finishing the towing and then compare that to where you are now. Do you have an iDash or other aftermarket monitor installed?
Also, was there a significant temperature difference between where you were towing and camping, and where you are now when “home”?
I would still let them change it when it comes in. If they say the DPF gauge is on zero,tell them it just regened on the way over here.Picked up my truck from the dealer a week ago. They ordered a new DPF and told me I could continue to drive it. They said the DPF is over a month out.
Crazy thing is my DPF% gauge has still not moved off zero since I picked it up. I also had them do fuel filters and oil change. Not sure what else changed.