99DPF Logo

What to Expect During Professional DPF Cleaning

March 25, 2026
|
mechanic works on a car

If you run diesel trucks or manage a fleet, your diesel particulate filters (DPFs) are directly tied to uptime, fuel economy, and emissions compliance. Even with proper maintenance, DPFs eventually load up with soot and ash and need a professional off‑truck cleaning—not just another regen—to keep trucks on the road and safe.

This guide walks through what happens during a professional DPF cleaning, how reputable providers validate filter cleanliness, and what proof of performance fleet managers should always request before a cleaned filter goes back into service.

Why Professional DPF Cleaning Matters

Modern DPFs are designed to capture and store particulate matter from diesel exhaust. Properly functioning DPF systems dramatically reduce particulate emissions compared with older engines without aftertreatment. That’s good for air quality and compliance, but it also means your filters are constantly filling with soot and, over time, non‑combustible ash.

On‑truck regens burn off much of the soot, but ash does not burn. As ash accumulates, you see:

  • Higher backpressure and more frequent regens
  • Increased fuel consumption
  • More downtime and fault codes
  • Potential damage to the DPF and other aftertreatment components

A proper professional cleaning restores flow and reduces restriction, helping you avoid premature filter replacement and protect your investment.

Step 1: Receiving, Identification, and Visual Inspection

A quality cleaning process starts the moment your filter arrives. The provider should log and label each DPF with a work order number, unit number, and any identifiers you provide. This prevents mix‑ups and lets you track which filter came from which truck.

Next is visual inspection. Technicians check for:

  • Cracks, dents, or impact damage on the can
  • Damaged bungs, flanges, or sensor ports
  • Melted, cracked, or distorted substrate visible at the inlet or outlet
  • Signs of coolant, fuel, or oil contamination in the channels

Filters with severe structural damage or heavy contamination may not be safely recoverable. A reputable provider will flag those issues instead of just “cleaning” a failed unit and sending it back. As a fleet manager, this is also where you should expect photos and notes that document the incoming condition of your DPF.

Step 2: Pre‑Cleaning Testing and Baseline Data

Before any cleaning starts, professional shops perform baseline tests so they can measure improvement afterward and prove the work was effective.

Two common tests are:

  • Pre‑clean weight – The DPF is weighed on a scale.
  • Pre‑clean flow or restriction – The filter is placed on a test stand that measures airflow at a set pressure or measures restriction at a standardized flow.

These readings give you objective data on how plugged the filter was when it arrived. They also become the benchmark for post‑clean verification. When you’re evaluating providers, ask specifically what before‑and‑after test reports they supply; if they can’t show numbers, you don’t really know what you’re getting.

Step 3: Selecting the Right Cleaning Method

Not every DPF should be cleaned the same way. The right approach depends on the filter design, loading level, and type of contamination. Most professional facilities use a combination of:

Thermal Baking

The DPF is placed in a controlled‑temperature oven for a set cycle. The heat helps oxidize and loosen hardened soot and softens ash deposits so they can be removed more effectively. This isn’t just a truck regen—it’s a specifically engineered off‑truck bake.

Pneumatic (Air) Cleaning

After baking, the DPF moves to a machine that uses high‑volume, pulsed air to blow soot and ash out of the channels. A proper setup includes dust collection so contaminants are safely captured and often reverses airflow direction to clean from both ends.

Aqueous / Liquid Cleaning

Some filters and contamination types respond well to carefully controlled liquid‑based cleaning with the right chemistry and pressure. Used incorrectly, though, this can damage the substrate, so reputable providers follow OEM‑aligned guidelines and avoid harsh shortcuts.

Regulatory and technical resources from manufacturers and agencies like the California Air Resources Board emphasize following approved DPF maintenance practices to preserve emissions performance and warranty coverage. Your cleaning partner should be able to explain how their methods line up with those standards.

Step 4: Post‑Cleaning Verification and Quality Check

Once cleaning is complete, a professional shop verifies that the filter is actually back within acceptable limits. This is where you get the proof you need.

Post‑clean verification usually includes:

  • Post‑Clean Weight – Compared to the original weight, this shows how much material was removed.
  • Post‑Clean Flow or Restriction Test – The exact same test performed before cleaning is repeated, so you can compare apples to apples.
  • Final Visual Inspection – Technicians check that the channels are clear, the face looks uniform, and there’s no new damage from the cleaning process.

From your standpoint, the key is documentation. The shop should provide:

  • Pre‑ and post‑clean flow or restriction values
  • Pre‑ and post‑clean weights
  • Pass/fail status based on agreed standards
  • Notes on any damage or contamination found

Step 5: Back on the Truck and Back on the Road

Once your DPF returns from the cleaning provider, proper reinstallation and on‑truck checks close the loop. Technicians should inspect clamps, gaskets, and sensors; correct any exhaust leaks; clear related fault codes; and monitor backpressure, regen frequency, and driver feedback over the next runs.

That real‑world performance—combined with solid documentation from your cleaning partner—is the best confirmation that your DPF service is working, your emissions system is protected, and your trucks are ready to keep earning.

Don’t forget to share this post:

Recent Post

99DPF Logo
725 South Lugo Avenue
San Bernardino, CA 92408
(877) 367-9937

16516 Washington Dr
Fontana, CA 92335
Subscribe to get discounts
Subscription Form

$99DPF

©2018-2024 $99DPF | All Rights Reserved | $99DPF is a FleetServ™ Product
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram