Chevrolet Cruze Forums banner
1 - 20 of 40 Posts

· Premium Member
Joined
·
4,647 Posts
Discussion Starter · #1 ·
Vehicle Car Speedometer Auto part Odometer

So, I have made another major milestone in my 2014 Chevy Cruze Diesel, 150,000 miles. I have previously posted my experience through 50K and 100K

Here: http://www.cruzetalk.com/forum/64-c...iscussion/56962-50000-miles-cruze-diesel.html

And Here: http://www.cruzetalk.com/forum/64-c...7-100k-miles-2014-chevrolet-cruze-diesel.html

This review will pretty much be from the 100K point to the present. Other than normal maintenance items such as a timing belt and rear brake pads at 145K miles, nothing needed replacing during the period from 100K to 150K miles. It continues to be a reliable, comfortable, fuel efficient and powerful (for what it is) car. It still runs and drives just like the day it did when I picked it up with 55 miles on the clock. The car remains rattle and squeak free, the seats still look new, the suspension is still tight and supple. That being said, the timing belt tensioner (or something in that belt system) did start to whine a couple thousand miles before I had the timing belt replaced, but I do not consider that an “issue” since I went almost 50,000 miles past when I was supposed to change the timing belt.

I did say that nothing needed to be replaced from 100K to 150K but I did have a couple issues, which I file under the “learning experience” category. I am a bit biased on this car admittedly, so there will be some who read what I am about to say and take it more negatively than I did, but I will state the facts, what I learned, and most importantly how others can prevent it from happening to them,

At about 115K and again at 131K, I got a CEL (Check Engine Light) and a message that my DPF was full and to keep driving, immediately followed by a Power Reduced message. I got very lucky in that both times I was able to drive it straight to the dealership for a manual DPF (Diesel Particulate Filter) regeneration. After it happened the first time, I got an aftermarket gauge to monitor certain parameters of the car, namely:

“Regen Status” (Indicates when there is a regen of the DPF to burn off accumulated soot)

“Soot Grams” (Indicates how many grams of soot have accumulated in the DPF)

“Manifold Absolute Pressure (MAP)” (Indicates turbo boost – or vacuum. 14.0 is the equivalent to zero boost. Anything under that is vacuum).

After I got the monitor (well, two monitors, but we can ignore the first one) - called a Scangauge II (it’s documented thoroughly on this forum) – I thought I was free and clear, but not so much. One day, I observed that my grams of soot were up to 22, higher than the usual 19 grams that trigger a regen, but I thought nothing of it. I also noticed that the MAP had dropped well below 14 before I shut the car off, but the Regen Indicator said there was none in progress. When I shut the car off, the soot grams went from 22 to 35 immediately. When I started the car the next time, I had the dreaded “Power Reduced” message and CEL again.

Here’s what happens. There’s about a 30 second window in which the car starts gearing up for a regen and this is indicated by MAP below 14, but the Regen Indicator is not on yet. I believe the car has started the process of injecting fuel in to the DPF to heat it up, but it’s not hot enough to start burning the soot off at this point, and as such it gets clogged if you shut the car off during this 30 second (or so) window. The solution is to never shut the car off when both the Regen Indicator is off AND the MAP is below 14. (Or for those of you who prefer to monitor turbo boost – it will turn to a negative number)

Hopefully I haven’t lost you there. The downside to this is that you will need to buy a gauge ($120-ish) to monitor this, and it is considerably cheaper than the cost of one manual regen ($250-ish). Should you have to do this? NO, but it is what it is. Maybe the engineers will figure out a way around this in the next go-around, or at least figure a way to alert the driver.

Odds are pretty good this won’t ever happen to you. It took 115K miles for it to happen to me, and I am glad it did because now I have a clear understanding (I think) of what happened and am able to help others prevent it. If you do have this message, you probably can’t drive much further than 50-100 miles without damaging the DPF. Since then, that particular set of circumstances has not presented itself and all the emissions components have been working well. I am averaging 800-1000 miles in between regen cycles lately.

Now that that’s all out of the way, I can go on raving about the car. I never in a million years imagined I would still have this car after 150K miles and now looking forward to the 200K mark. I love this car as much as I did the day I test drove it, and simply find it very engaging and fun to drive every day. I continue to be thoroughly impressed with the engineering and build quality of this car – all aspects – but especially the powertrain. I am at a point now where I can see this being a good and reliable car for hundreds of thousands of miles. Of course time will tell, but I am still in the game and on my way to 200K as a daily driver and we shall see where it goes from there.
 

· Administrator
Joined
·
7,380 Posts
Congratulations young man! May you have many more in good health.
 
  • Like
Reactions: diesel

· Registered
Joined
·
455 Posts
Congrats Diesel and many thanks for sharing your insightful long run diesel experience, I take your advice to not shut off the car while map is below 14 and regen off. Do u have any tunes installed in your vehicle?

Sent from my LGMS631 using Tapatalk
 

· Banned
Joined
·
631 Posts
150k on a 2014.....do you ever get OUT of the car? My 2014 has less than 13k. And I thought I drive it a lot. I honestly hope I get to see 150k without any major problems in mine. That would make me really happy.
 
  • Like
Reactions: diesel

· Registered
Joined
·
719 Posts
This is pretty awesome, diesel. Congrats! On to 200,000!!


I am averaging 800-1000 miles in between regen cycles lately.
I did get the (dreaded? annoying?) P0133 code for a bad O2 sensor at 25k, which they tried to remedy by cleaning it. It came on again at about 30k, so they replaced the sensor. One thing I noticed is that for a few weeks around November, I was building soot really fast, in one case getting less than 100 miles between regens. I attributed it to the bad, wet weather we're having plus lots of short driving, but it seems since they replaced the O2 sensor, my regens have been considerably more spaced. I'm currently at nearly 500 miles of 100% short, city driving, and I'm still only at 18 grams (mine always starts a regen at 22). I wonder if a properly functioning O2 sensor helps contribute to cleaner burning. I have noticed no change in fuel consumption, however.

My driving situation has changed dramatically since getting the car so the car is seeing much shorter daily driving (10 miles one-way to work instead of 53 when I bought it). I'm not sure my long-term experience will be as rosy as yours, but here's to hoping.
 
  • Like
Reactions: diesel

· Premium Member
Joined
·
4,647 Posts
Discussion Starter · #10 ·
Wow. 100,000 miles in 10 months. GM marketing should think about this.
Not quite! I averaging about 4800 miles per month, roughly 160 per day.

Congrats Diesel and many thanks for sharing your insightful long run diesel experience, I take your advice to not shut off the car while map is below 14 and regen off. Do u have any tunes installed in your vehicle?

Sent from my LGMS631 using Tapatalk
Factory stock. No mods at all.

150k on a 2014.....do you ever get OUT of the car? My 2014 has less than 13k. And I thought I drive it a lot. I honestly hope I get to see 150k without any major problems in mine. That would make me really happy.
It's funny, I don't feel like I drive enough!

So I must've missed it but what was your final bill for the timing belt and how many hours did they charge for
Off the top of my head I think right in the $700 range, including all the tensioners and stuff. I had them do some other things at the time and it all got lumped together, but that's a pretty good estimate.
 
  • Like
Reactions: pacolino

· Registered
Joined
·
281 Posts
Diesel, thanks for the nice write up. I have never seen my boost go to negative numbers (not sure it will on my CTS). I haven't monitored the atmospheric pressure. I find it strange that your car goes into regen at 18 grams. Mine, like PanJet's, starts at 22 grams. Any clue why the difference. I was driving mine last night when it rolled over to 22 grams, so I took your advice and continued driving until a regen was initiated and completed. As always, your information is really appreciated !
 

· Registered
Joined
·
240 Posts
Do you guys all put your scan gauge on top of the column or do they make nice small ones now?

Its the same Scan Gauge they've been making for years. Just installed mine last week and don't find it obtrusive at all ( the wire is a lil thick though). The Scan Gauge 2 has a special firmware & instructions written just for us CTD owners ( thanks Scan Gauge!!) . I purchased factory direct and am liking it so far.

i am running the following gauges: Soot Mass, distance since last regen, Regen Status , Manifold absolute pressure. ( these are what the oem car should have had all along).

Thanks for for the write-up @diesel.
 
  • Like
Reactions: diesel

· COTM Winner
2014 Cruze Diesel, 2007 Cobalt, 1981 Camaro Z28, 2017 Volt
Joined
·
7,220 Posts
Do you guys all put your scan gauge on top of the column or do they make nice small ones now?
I do wish they made a round one...I'd grab the ZZP A-pillar pod and pop it in there. The rectangular one looks too "stuck-on" for me. I'd love its functionality, but it'll never look integrated enough until it's round.

Great seeing 150k on one of yours though @diesel, though. Ours is just shy of 34k miles right now, having had it since May 2014. We were putting a lot more miles on it then, as it was a 100-mile round trip to work every day, and then 70 miles from that house to our house now when moving (and we made a lot of trips). It certainly shows in that we drove the same amount of miles in all of 2015 as we did in 8 months of 2014.

As far as the tensioner/belt goes, is this all that needs to be replaced at that time (100k?). Wonder how difficult it'll be. I can't really justify paying the dealer $700 to do it, when I'm likely plenty capable to do it myself, unless it's a real pain in the dick.
 

· Premium Member
Joined
·
1,958 Posts
Congrats diesel. Appreciate the write up.
 
  • Like
Reactions: diesel

· Premium Member
Joined
·
4,647 Posts
Discussion Starter · #18 ·
Diesel, thanks for the nice write up. I have never seen my boost go to negative numbers (not sure it will on my CTS). I haven't monitored the atmospheric pressure. I find it strange that your car goes into regen at 18 grams. Mine, like PanJet's, starts at 22 grams. Any clue why the difference. I was driving mine last night when it rolled over to 22 grams, so I took your advice and continued driving until a regen was initiated and completed. As always, your information is really appreciated !
It's very hard to catch. Only lasts for about 30 seconds before regen status goes to 1 and there's no warning when it will happen, BUT, during a regen, the MAP remains below 14 (negative boost) if you are coasting or idling. This gives you more time to see if you get the negative reading.

I have no idea why mine shows 19 grams. I think my Edge CTS showed that as well so it's not specific to the aftermarket gauge. Could be the car's programming. It has me curious.

I do wish they made a round one...I'd grab the ZZP A-pillar pod and pop it in there. The rectangular one looks too "stuck-on" for me. I'd love its functionality, but it'll never look integrated enough until it's round.

Great seeing 150k on one of yours though @diesel, though. Ours is just shy of 34k miles right now, having had it since May 2014. We were putting a lot more miles on it then, as it was a 100-mile round trip to work every day, and then 70 miles from that house to our house now when moving (and we made a lot of trips). It certainly shows in that we drove the same amount of miles in all of 2015 as we did in 8 months of 2014.

As far as the tensioner/belt goes, is this all that needs to be replaced at that time (100k?). Wonder how difficult it'll be. I can't really justify paying the dealer $700 to do it, when I'm likely plenty capable to do it myself, unless it's a real pain in the dick.
Just for good measure, i also had the alternator belt and tensioner(s) done at the same time. The dealer showed I think 3 hours labor on the timing belt.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Cruzator

· COTM Winner
2014 Cruze Diesel, 2007 Cobalt, 1981 Camaro Z28, 2017 Volt
Joined
·
7,220 Posts
Just for good measure, i also had the alternator belt and tensioner(s) done at the same time. The dealer showed I think 3 hours labor on the timing belt.
Oh, okay, that doesn't sound terrible. And it makes sense to have those all done too, considering half of it has to come off anyway.
 
1 - 20 of 40 Posts
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top