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pcourtney



Member Since: 14 Jan 2020
Location: Stansted
Posts: 806

England 2011 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Sumatra Black

my reading of the below - I was expecting more of a comfortable driving experience over bumpy roads Smile




this is the bit that caught my eye

"To maintain wheel travel, the rear dampers feature an additional external accumulator.
This is to provide adequate rebound travel by recovering the volume through the external source"


How would it be possible to test if one of both of these external accumulators is working as intended ( or not ) ??


Last edited by pcourtney on 20th Apr 2023 7:21pm. Edited 1 time in total

Post #645368 11th Oct 2022 1:18pm
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JayGee



Member Since: 27 Jul 2021
Location: London
Posts: 3203

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Orkney Grey

That explains how the dampers go from firm to soft but not how the ECU decides when to set the dampers to firm or soft. Early RR drivers no doubt expected a soft ride with relaxed handling but the market shifted to customers who wanted a firmer more responsive ride and this may be the compromise we have now. I still can't see how a system like this can at once detect a sudden jolt from an imperfection in the road surface and open the shock absorber valve quickly enough to prevent it causing that motion to be transferred to the body. 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322)

Post #645372 11th Oct 2022 1:41pm
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GraemeS



Member Since: 06 Mar 2015
Location: Wagga area
Posts: 2475

Australia 2012 Range Rover Autobiography TDV8 Bournville

pcourtney wrote:
How would it be possible to test if one of both of these external accumulators is working as intended ( or not ) ??
They are just external reservoirs to hold more oil. They can get knocked and break off which allows all the oil in the shock to drain out.

Post #645401 11th Oct 2022 7:56pm
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Haylands



Member Since: 04 Mar 2014
Location: East Yorkshire
Posts: 8191

England 2014 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Loire Blue

JayGee wrote:
I still can't see how a system like this can at once detect a sudden jolt from an imperfection in the road surface and open the shock absorber valve quickly enough to prevent it causing that motion to be transferred to the body.


Electricity travels at roughly 90% of the speed of light, easily fast enough for the dampers to adjust in real time to suit the road conditions... Thumbs Up Pete

__________________________________________________
2014 L405 Autobiography SDV8 4.4 Loire Blue Ebony interior
2011 L322 Vogue SE 4.4 TDV8 Baltic Blue. Parchment over Navy Interior. Sold
2012 L322 Autobiography 5.0 Supercharged Ipanema Sand, Jet Interior. Sold
2002 L322 Vogue 4.4 V8 Epson Green, Ivory over Aspen Interior (Fatty Offroader) Sold
-Click for Project Fatty off roader-

Post #645411 12th Oct 2022 7:45am
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JayGee



Member Since: 27 Jul 2021
Location: London
Posts: 3203

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Orkney Grey

The ECU still has to receive and process the signals from the accelerometers and height sensors and then the valve has to open which is a mechanical device. Unless there was a sensor system that read the road infront of the vehicle to soften the dampers ready for an impact I can't see how this can work to iron out these kinds of jolts. 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322)

Post #645413 12th Oct 2022 7:56am
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GraemeS



Member Since: 06 Mar 2015
Location: Wagga area
Posts: 2475

Australia 2012 Range Rover Autobiography TDV8 Bournville

I recall reading that Mercedes scan the road so that the shocks can be prep'd for the bump, rather than wait for the sharp wheel movement when its a bit late.

Post #645424 12th Oct 2022 9:57am
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Haylands



Member Since: 04 Mar 2014
Location: East Yorkshire
Posts: 8191

England 2014 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Loire Blue

Maybe it responds to the pothole by tightening up and preventing bounce once you have driven over it...

It could be smoke and mirrors as well.... Rolling with laughter

Whatever it does the two 2010-12 ones I have had ride bumps, potholes and traffic calming much better than the earlier ones and body roll on corners is massively reduced, at no point would I call it hard....

Tyres and tyre pressures have a massive impact on ride, my wifes Lexus came with new runflats, they went in the skip within days, it was as if it didn't have suspension... "Normal" tyres and it's fine... Pete

__________________________________________________
2014 L405 Autobiography SDV8 4.4 Loire Blue Ebony interior
2011 L322 Vogue SE 4.4 TDV8 Baltic Blue. Parchment over Navy Interior. Sold
2012 L322 Autobiography 5.0 Supercharged Ipanema Sand, Jet Interior. Sold
2002 L322 Vogue 4.4 V8 Epson Green, Ivory over Aspen Interior (Fatty Offroader) Sold
-Click for Project Fatty off roader-

Post #645434 12th Oct 2022 11:17am
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JayGee



Member Since: 27 Jul 2021
Location: London
Posts: 3203

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Orkney Grey

Mine's much better now. I had been running on -12mm via the GAP IID tool and reset it to standard and it suddenly got a lot better. Doubt a 12mm change in itself made a difference but it may well have reset something? 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322)

Post #646333 23rd Oct 2022 8:16pm
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Caesium



Member Since: 21 Sep 2021
Location: Essex
Posts: 451

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Santorini Black

I have noticed that my car has also gotten quite hard at the rear end and I have metered out the dampers for PWM directly by interfacing my multimeter with the damper wiring. I set the meter up for data logging and got some direct data from the drive around the block.

When out for a drive the duty cycle varies between 0-35% which in reality is rock hard to slightly less rock hard. It looks like the CVD module output from the sensor data is inverted.

The damper duty cycle at 100% would be classified as soft.

The IID tool shows the damper status as soft in the live data but the damper itself would suggest this is actually the opposite.

I have tested all the height sensors and yaw sensors and they are all spot on within tolerance and the dampers themselves are all perfectly functional. I have a replacement CVD module on the way and I'll see what the system does when I swap out the units. Christian.


Current Cars
2011 Range Rover Vogue SE
2020 BMW M4 Competition
2019 BMW X4

My RR Blog: www.facebook.com/L322Project
or
https://www.fullfatrr.com/forum/topic61540.html

Post #646363 24th Oct 2022 12:31pm
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pcourtney



Member Since: 14 Jan 2020
Location: Stansted
Posts: 806

England 2011 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Sumatra Black

Graeme wrote this back in Nov 2017 - which caught my eye


My 1st recalibration was done whilst not moving so the CVD's were set uselessly soft.

The next was done whilst driving over very rough off-road conditions causing them to be set too firm .

The current calibration was done on very slightly rough secondary sealed road

The next one will be done at 80-100 kph on my not so smooth gravel lane.

NB Recalibration is done for a 10 second (or thereabouts) period.

===========

so if some of us are having harsh ride conditions in our late L322's ( CVD was standard on MY11 and MY12 cars) , then it might be worth recalibrating the CVD modules when the car is stationary - and see if the ride becomes more compliant after doing that

Post #646368 24th Oct 2022 1:31pm
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Caesium



Member Since: 21 Sep 2021
Location: Essex
Posts: 451

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Santorini Black

I calibrated mine whilst stationary and they are still race car hard so I'm not sure that has any relevance to the fault I am seeing.

BTW See you are in Stortford, I'm about 2 mins from there Thumbs Up Christian.


Current Cars
2011 Range Rover Vogue SE
2020 BMW M4 Competition
2019 BMW X4

My RR Blog: www.facebook.com/L322Project
or
https://www.fullfatrr.com/forum/topic61540.html

Post #646369 24th Oct 2022 1:48pm
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JayGee



Member Since: 27 Jul 2021
Location: London
Posts: 3203

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Orkney Grey

Logically such a system would self calibrate over time to account for long term changes like wear in shock absorbers and short term changes like load changes i.e when the vehicle is fully loaded and when it's not. 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322)

Post #646372 24th Oct 2022 1:53pm
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Ffrr-lover



Member Since: 04 May 2021
Location: Lincolnshire
Posts: 640

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Santorini Black

JayGee wrote:
Mine's much better now. I had been running on -12mm via the GAP IID tool and reset it to standard and it suddenly got a lot better. Doubt a 12mm change in itself made a difference but it may well have reset something?


Interesting… I assume all you did was follow the guided height calibration? No other steps?
Did you check your height sensors were not rusted? Mine were… and maybe that extra 12mm is enough for it to move around… if starting to seize. Currently driving: 2012 L322 SE Overfinch 4.4 tdv8

Past rides:
2014 Audi Q7 3.0d (good riddance)
2010 L322 Autobiography 5.0 Supercharged
2011 L320 HSE 3.0 sdv6
2014 Jaguar XF-RS 5.0 supercharged
2007 BMW 535D
2005 Mini Cooper S

https://www.fullfatrr.com/forum/topic59478.html

Post #646419 24th Oct 2022 6:56pm
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Ffrr-lover



Member Since: 04 May 2021
Location: Lincolnshire
Posts: 640

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Santorini Black

pcourtney wrote:
Graeme wrote this back in Nov 2017 - which caught my eye


My 1st recalibration was done whilst not moving so the CVD's were set uselessly soft.

The next was done whilst driving over very rough off-road conditions causing them to be set too firm .

The current calibration was done on very slightly rough secondary sealed road

The next one will be done at 80-100 kph on my not so smooth gravel lane.

NB Recalibration is done for a 10 second (or thereabouts) period.

===========

so if some of us are having harsh ride conditions in our late L322's ( CVD was standard on MY11 and MY12 cars) , then it might be worth recalibrating the CVD modules when the car is stationary - and see if the ride becomes more compliant after doing that


I’ve always calibrated on the move. I thought it only worked when moving, so will try tonight. Just to see if it makes a difference… Currently driving: 2012 L322 SE Overfinch 4.4 tdv8

Past rides:
2014 Audi Q7 3.0d (good riddance)
2010 L322 Autobiography 5.0 Supercharged
2011 L320 HSE 3.0 sdv6
2014 Jaguar XF-RS 5.0 supercharged
2007 BMW 535D
2005 Mini Cooper S

https://www.fullfatrr.com/forum/topic59478.html

Post #646420 24th Oct 2022 6:57pm
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Ffrr-lover



Member Since: 04 May 2021
Location: Lincolnshire
Posts: 640

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Santorini Black

Caesium wrote:
I have tested all the height sensors and yaw sensors and they are all spot on within tolerance and the dampers themselves are all perfectly functional. I have a replacement CVD module on the way and I'll see what the system does when I swap out the units.


I am keen to see how you get on. I purchased a CVD module a while back, but it turned out to be from an l320 so not compatible.

My rears seem harsher than the fronts, despite new rear struts. Currently driving: 2012 L322 SE Overfinch 4.4 tdv8

Past rides:
2014 Audi Q7 3.0d (good riddance)
2010 L322 Autobiography 5.0 Supercharged
2011 L320 HSE 3.0 sdv6
2014 Jaguar XF-RS 5.0 supercharged
2007 BMW 535D
2005 Mini Cooper S

https://www.fullfatrr.com/forum/topic59478.html

Post #646421 24th Oct 2022 7:01pm
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