Hi, Another way is to drive over full width speed bumps slowly, say walking speed, you'll tell by the way the car reacts whether one side is damping better than the other. Or of the car bounces excessively then both might be gone, or doesn't bounce at all then one could be siezed, rule of thumb is 1 bounce then settles.
Get a friend to do the same in your car as you may think the behaviour is perfectly normal as you have got used to it, another driver unfamiliar with your car would easily spot something out of the ordinary as their expectations would be different.
The traditional bounce on the corner isn't going to do anything on a Range Rover unless you're quite weighty yourself and you'd have to do with the engine running to make sure everythingis primed.
If you remove them from the car and you can compress them easily that tells you they're probably shot. You can't really hand prime shocks like you used to because gas ones should be constantly under pressure.
If you remove them both you could to a basic comparison check by clamping them in a vice and applying a fixed weight to compress them, i.e. 50kg and measuring how much they actually compress. Not at all scientific but will tell you whether one is leaking more than the other but more likely you'll hurt yourself in the process. Fuji White / Jet 2012 4.4 TDV8 Westminster
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