P242F — Diesel Particulate Filter Restriction – Ash Accumulation

Category: Powertrain → Aftertreatment / DPF


What it means (plain English)

The ECM has detected that the DPF is restricted by ash build-up, not just soot. Unlike soot (burned off in regen), ash is non-combustible (from oil additives, fuel contaminants, engine wear). Ash slowly accumulates until the DPF substrate is clogged.
(obd-codes.com)


Symptoms you’ll notice

  • MIL / DPF warning light (yourmechanic.com)
  • Low power / derate when restriction severe
  • Frequent regen attempts with little success
  • Poor fuel economy, possible overheating during regen attempts
  • Eventually, truck may go into limp mode (repairpal.com)

Priority level

High. Ash is permanent—cannot be burned off by regeneration. Filter service or replacement is required.


Common causes

  • Normal wear/aging: ash naturally accumulates over 100k+ miles of driving (obd-codes.com)
  • Excessive oil consumption (engine burning oil = faster ash build-up)
  • Poor quality fuel/lubricants with high ash-forming additives
  • Extended service intervals without DPF maintenance/cleaning
  • Faulty sensors misreporting restriction (less common)

How pros diagnose it (step-by-step)

  1. Scan soot vs. ash load values: confirm code is ash-related (non-combustible load).
  2. Compare ΔP sensor data: confirm restriction persists even after regen.
  3. Command regen: verify soot mass decreases but ΔP remains high = ash restriction.
  4. Inspect sensors & hoses: rule out false positives from clogged pressure hoses.
  5. Mileage/service history check: confirm vehicle age/miles align with typical ash limits.

Likely fixes

  • DPF cleaning service (bake/blow or liquid cleaning) to remove ash
  • DPF replacement if substrate is cracked or ash cannot be cleared
  • Address oil consumption issues (rings, turbo seals, valve guides) to slow future ash buildup
  • Replace faulty DPF sensors/hoses if misreporting

Related / companion codes

P2002 (efficiency), P2463 (soot restriction), P2459 (regen frequency).


Tech notes

Ash accumulation is inevitable: OEMs often design DPFs to last 120–150k miles before cleaning/replacement is required. Trucks with high idle time or oil use often set P242F earlier.