
Just go on ebay and spend 15 bucks.
They make plugs for the egr so the computer doesnt know its gone.
john,
Where in "Worshington" are you? pm if you like...
What shop did the tuning?
If a dyno shop was not able to match an 'untuned' dyno number, then (I would guess...) one of 2 things...
1. they tuned for 'track time', which is not the same as tuning for dyno numbers. I doubt this scenario if the car was not tuned at the track though...
2. the tuner intentionally burned a more conservative tune for liability reasons.
I would *guess* #2... but I am curious...
jason

That's even worse than unplugging the EGR and leaving it all umplugged. Now the computer will think it's functional and pull timing and fuel at part throttgle settings and run lean.
Personally, i don't see why people remove the EGR. Whoever said it robs HP is just spilling a bunch of baloney. It only works at part throttle and does help slightly with fuel economy. The minute you whack the throttle it shuts off.
I've seen more problems associated with the removing the EGR and tripping the light than leaving it be. I'm not entirely convinced that when the light trips the computer completely shuts off the EGR as i usually see guys having lean or backfiring probs with a disabled EGR as well as other drivability probs that were solved by repairing the EGR system.
I also think custom chips are the way to go. Everytime i've gone with friends and put an SCT chip on their car and they've been dyno tuned they have gained power and smoothed out the curve and corrected minor tune problems. I've seen weird things before the custom tune and they were all tuned out. I will be putting an SCT chip on my car and having a custom tune done.