Really even though it was removed and had an acid bath?
I'm not sure (and I'm a scientist) exactly what cleaning a DPF out 'with an acid bath' is supposed to accomplish.
OK, lets start at the beginning - a 'new' DPF basically catches the soot from the engine that (on old diesels) would be pushed out of the exhaust pipe. Then, when the exhaust gets fully up to temperature, that soot gets burnt down to ash, which sits inside the 'body' of the DPF. (this is why lots of short trips are really bad for DPF diesel cars - the exhaust never gets up to temp, and the DPF gets clogged up with soot that hasn't burnt down to ash).
Eventually, even with a good system and lots of high temperatures, the DPF gets full of ash. That ash is basically inert. It will not react with acids or alkalis. So that's why I don't see how an 'acid bath' would help to clean it out.
The only way that I know of to 'clean out' a DPF that's like that is by a system which basically blasts very high temperature air (300+ C, I seem to recall) through the filter for several hours, basically vapourising the ash.
You can't 'clean' a clogged DPF with acid, or snake oil, or any of those 'magic' products. You either get it removed and cleaned properly, or you get it replaced.
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