Unless the backpressure valve or the diaphragm in the EGR fails they'll normally last forever....unless you burn so much oil your entire exhaust looks like the lungs of a coal miner.
BUT, I have noticed that the metering orifice does vary between years, so if you do need a replacement, be careful about that.
Don't know if a backpressure EGR is working when installed? T-off the vacuum line to the EGR and hang a vacuum gauge inside the car.
On a cold engine the CTO on the intake manifold and the TVS on the back of the air cleaner prevent the EGR from operating, so you will accelerate and there will be no vacuum on the gauge.
Once both valves open you will have ported vacuum at the EGR whenever you accelerate. You will see an initial 10inHG, then a slow addition of another 5inHG as the backpressure valve closes and the EGR opens. Both will drop off when you let off the throttle and the EGR should rapidly close.
The biggest thing you can do to the 2BBD after a complete disassembly, wash/scrub and rebuild is baseline the whole thing. Properly. At that point you can begin separating carb issues from sensor or ignition problems.
1 - Rebuild carb, lubricate the stepper motor, reset all internal adjustments to specification
range (the TSM specs WILL conflict with the specs included with most rebuild kits) and clean the stepper motor connector/use a piece of stiff wire to keep connecotrs with broken tabs from unplugging. (this feels like the "
draw the rest of the owl" step)
2 - Make sure timing is set to spec (you can do this with the feedback system in an unknown state and the TSM outlines how and yes this step royally sucks)
3 - Reset the two idle mixture screws as outlined in the TSM, because the traditional method will affect the feedback system
4 - Set initial choke pulloff adjustment
5 - Set choke unloader adjustment
6 - Set high idle
7 - Set curb idle
8 - Set vacuum kick idle
9 - Set solenoid kick idle
At some point, the lack of decent parts support + time spent trying to diagnose a 40-year-old system that requires every single little electronic doohickey to be working absolutely perfectly should lead everyone down the EFI path, but I guess some people are gluttons for punishment.
I hate this. Working on the CeC sucks but at this point
someone has to sit down and learn how it works because there are increasingly fewer states/provinces allowing for non-functioning systems through loopholes and increasingly more people looking for 80's classic cars that are dealership original with no modifications.
Edited: Even if you do not have the tester, this book is a very good read as it contains wiring diagrams and troubleshooting flowcharts for all years of the feedback system.
https://archive.org/details/amcet501instructionmanual/mode/2up