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Parts for your 2010 Nissan Serena-Egr valve

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2010 Nissan Serena EGR valve: what owners need to know

Based on Nissan’s own technical literature for the C25 and early C26 Serena with the MR20DE 2.0‑litre petrol engine, this model does not use a conventional external EGR valve. The Nissan Factory Service Manual (EC section, MR20DE) for the Serena lists “EGR: Not applied” and shows no EGR components in the engine control system diagrams. Likewise, the Nissan Electronic Parts Catalogue for C25 MR20DE petrol variants carries no EGR valve service part. MR‑series petrol engine technical overviews also note the use of continuously variable valve timing to achieve internal EGR effects, meeting emissions targets without a separate EGR valve. So for a 2010 Nissan Serena running the factory MR20DE, an EGR valve isn’t fitted or serviced.

Why it’s not used on this Serena comes down to how the MR20DE manages emissions and combustion. By phasing the intake (and, on some variants, exhaust) cam timing, the engine pulls a controlled amount of residual exhaust back into the cylinder—an “internal EGR” effect—reducing NOx without the plumbing, cooler, and control hardware of an external EGR valve. Combined with a three‑way catalytic converter, precise fuel control, and knock‑resistant ignition mapping, it meets Japanese and export emissions requirements of the era. It’s simpler, lighter, and avoids one of the common carbon build‑up failure points seen on external EGR systems.

Owners chasing drivability or emissions faults on a 2010 Serena won’t find an EGR valve to clean. Instead, attention is better spent on items that commonly affect idle quality, economy, and NOx/HC output on the MR20DE:

  • Throttle body and idle air passages: clean and relearn.
  • MAF sensor: inspect/clean with MAF‑safe cleaner.
  • PCV valve and hoses: check for sticking or splits.
  • Vacuum leaks at the intake manifold and ducting.
  • Upstream O2 sensor and catalytic converter health.
  • Fresh spark plugs (correct heat range) and coil performance.

A small caveat: if a Serena has had a non‑standard engine swap (for example, a diesel installation), an EGR system may exist. For stock 2010 petrol models, though, there’s no separate EGR valve to service or replace.

Popular questions about the 2010‑Nissan‑Serena EGR valve

Does a 2010 Nissan Serena have an EGR valve?
No—on factory petrol models with the MR20DE, Nissan did not fit an external EGR valve. The Factory Service Manual indicates “EGR: Not applied”, and the parts catalogue lists no EGR valve for this engine. Emissions are handled via cam timing (internal EGR) and a three‑way cat.

What should be checked if there are EGR‑like symptoms (rough idle, pinging) on a 2010 Serena?
Because there’s no EGR valve to clog, look to the basics: a dirty throttle body, a contaminated MAF sensor, vacuum leaks, a sticking PCV valve, ageing ignition coils, or tired spark plugs. Fuel quality and carbon deposits in the intake can also trigger knock