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The egr system was designed separately from the engine so it can be removed easily. It's basically a bolt on system for emissions laws.
I believe the only thing that needs vacuum is the FPR, the brake booster and the PCV system. If you are running a turbo, DO NOT plumb the PCV hoses back into the intake system. Vent them into a separate catch that vents to the atmosphere.
bsmart82: I removed everything between the intake manifold, removed the evap system, canister, and left the vent hose from the tank and tucked it away in the engine bay. I plan to add a filter to the hose to keep trash out. I also removed the egr valve, modulator, fpr solenoid(and all others), and all vacuum lines to associated items. I ran a vacuum line from the intake manifold to the fpr and the solenoid pack harness plug I just left hanging.
What year is your 80? If you have a late OBDII truck, then I think you have to solve the issue of the EGR temp sensor throwing a check engine code. Someone with an OBDII truck can probably elaborate, but I think the ECU needs to see a temp increase from this sensor or it throws a code. My 1994 also has an EGR temp sensor, but if you short the two wires together, it will think it is up to temp.I really should have provided more background. I got this 80 for 4k a few weeks back and have been working on getting it back on the road. The frame is great for a new england rig but it had it's fair share of issues. As far as the manifolds are concerned someone decided to install aftermarket headers that had no port off the end for the EGR. Because of this I really have no choice whether I want the EGR or not. I smoke tested the intake and also discovered that nearly all of the EGR components were leaking air along with many of the lines under the manifold. As a result I have done the following to eliminate the system:
1. Removed the EGR pipe, cut it back to the base, and welded it closed. I reinstalled it on the back of the head with a new gasket. It's now permanently blocked.
2. Removed, sliced, and welded the EGR valve itself to fashion another block off. That will block the port on the intake manifold.
3. To do all of this I removed the upper half of the intake manifold and am now staring at all of the vacuum lines.
I would like to eliminate every vacuum line, VSV, and check valve etc. that I can to eliminate as many sources for vac leaks as I can. Others in this thread have gone one step further deleting the EVAP system as well. In that case every line under the manifold is basically removed, a vac line is run from the FPR to the intake, another from the booster to the intake, and the PCV lines remain. That is as simple as it gets.
The one thing I would like to leave in place is the EVAP. I just don't want the garage to smell like gas. I have a race car that's vented to atmosphere and it does smell. If it were just me in this house I'd probably just delete it but alas I have roommates aka my family lol.
So the EVAP system should basically just consist of a vacuum line that runs from the charcoal canister to an EVAP solenoid valve and another line up to the intake. What's confusing me though is the line from the canister has a y in it and then two lines go on from there to other components. I am trying to figure out what does what and what I need keep or delete. I can see if I can get some photos later, that would probably be helpful.
What year is your 80?