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Parts for your 2009 Ford Mondeo-Egr valve

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2009 Ford Mondeo EGR valve: fitment, purpose, and service advice

Technical sources indicate an EGR valve is fitted to 2009 Ford Mondeo diesel models, but generally not to the petrol variants. The Ford workshop manual/ETIS for Mondeo Mk4 (2007–2014) details an electronically controlled EGR valve (with cooler on many variants) on the 1.8, 2.0 and 2.2 Duratorq TDCi engines. Haynes coverage for Mondeo 2007–2014 Diesel outlines EGR location, faults and service. Engine family documentation for the PSA DW10/DW12 units used in the 2.0/2.2 TDCi specifies EGR for NOx control. By contrast, the Mondeo’s 1.6/2.0/2.3 Duratec petrol engines typically manage internal EGR via variable valve timing and do not use a separate external EGR valve in most markets, as noted in trade data sources such as Autodata/AllData.

For the 2009 Mondeo TDCi, the EGR valve’s job is to recirculate a measured amount of exhaust gas back into the intake under light to moderate load. That lowers combustion temperatures, which helps the car meet Euro emissions by cutting NOx. When the valve sticks or the cooler soots up, the engine can feel flat off the mark, blow a bit of smoke, surge at cruise, or throw an engine light with EGR flow codes. Fuel economy can slide and DPF regens may become more frequent.

As part of routine servicing, it’s smart to consider the EGR system from around 100,000–150,000 km, or earlier if there’s a lot of short-trip driving. A qualified tech can run a scan, command the valve and watch position feedback, then inspect the intake path for carbon. Where access permits, a careful off-car clean of the valve and passages with appropriate solvent can restore function. If the actuator is weak, the spindle seized, or the cooler leaking, replacement is the better shout. Always fit a quality gasket set, check coolant bleeding if the cooler’s disturbed, and perform an ECU adaptation/reset so the new valve learns correctly.

  • Common signs: rough idle, hesitation, black smoke, increased fuel use, EML with EGR-related DTCs.
  • Good habits: regular motorway runs to keep soot down, timely oil and air filter changes, and fixing boost leaks promptly.
  • After replacement: clear codes, run a road test through varied loads, and recheck for leaks under the bonnet.

For petrol 2009 Mondeo models, a separate EGR valve generally isn’t present