P2262 — Turbocharger/Supercharger Boost Pressure Not Detected – Mechanical

Category: Powertrain → Turbo/Boost

What it means (plain English)

The PCM expected boost under load but didn’t detect adequate boost pressure, pointing to a mechanical/airflow problem (leaks, wastegate stuck open, VGT not moving) or signal problem. CarParts

Symptoms you’ll notice

  • CEL, low power, may enter limp mode; drivability complaints under acceleration. YourMechanic

Priority level

High. Under-boost from mechanical failure can cause unsafe merging/towing performance and may cascade into DPF/EGR faults on diesels. CarParts

Common causes

  • Charge-air leaks (intercooler/hoses/clamps) or intake restrictions.
  • Wastegate stuck open/failed actuator/vacuum leaks.
  • VGT mechanism stuck (soot/corrosion) → no vane movement.
  • Faulty boost/MAP sensor or wiring (false “no boost”). CarParts+1

How pros diagnose it (step-by-step)

  1. Confirm with scan data: boost request vs actual. 2) Smoke/pressure test charge system. 3) Command/observe wastegate or VGT actuator movement. 4) Verify vacuum supply (if pneumatic). 5) Check MAP/boost sensor plausibility and wiring. CarParts+1

Likely fixes

  • Seal boost leaks, replace split hoses/couplers/intercooler.
  • Repair/replace actuator or wastegate, restore vacuum control.
  • Free/repair VGT (clean/replace seized components).
  • Replace faulty boost sensor/repair harness. YourMechanic

Related / companion codes

P0299 (underboost), P0243/P0245 (wastegate solenoid), P2563/P003A (VGT position). Kbb.com

Tech notes (quick hits)

On diesel platforms, a kinked inlet hose or soot-stuck VGT is a frequent real-world root cause discussed by techs. Cummins Forum