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barrieeld



Member Since: 07 Dec 2010
Location: Scotland
Posts: 260

Suspension Query Part 2

Was driving today when all of a sudden I got "suspension fault" coming up on the dash....I looked at the the suspension dial and the lights were off?

I stopped the car and restarted and its been fine since....any ideas?

Post #85353 4th Oct 2011 9:32pm
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47p2



Member Since: 05 Oct 2010
Location: Gone Beyond, Subaru
Posts: 8048

Scotland 
Re: Suspension Query Part 2

barrieeld wrote:
....any ideas?



One of the many joys of owning a FFRR Big Cry

Post #85355 4th Oct 2011 9:33pm
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barrieeld



Member Since: 07 Dec 2010
Location: Scotland
Posts: 260

is the suspension f*****d? of just one of these technical gremlins?

If it is then what cost r we talking about?

Post #85358 4th Oct 2011 9:38pm
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CG-SC



Member Since: 06 May 2011
Location: Falkirk
Posts: 528

2006 Range Rover Autobiography Supercharged Zambezi Silver

barrieeld wrote:
is the suspension f*****d? of just one of these technical gremlins?

If it is then what cost r we talking about?


Mine has done it before as well.......... Stolen / Gone: 2006MY Supercharged LPG Autobiography - Zambezi Silver with Sand/Jet/Jet Oxford Leather.....

Post #85360 4th Oct 2011 9:40pm
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47p2



Member Since: 05 Oct 2010
Location: Gone Beyond, Subaru
Posts: 8048

Scotland 

If you stopped and restarted with no faults it looks like it could have been a glitch. Best just keep an eye on it and hope for the best, or as an ex manager of mine used to say....."Let it develop" Big Cry

Post #85361 4th Oct 2011 9:40pm
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rayc



Member Since: 13 Sep 2011
Location: deal, kent
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United Kingdom 2007 Range Rover Vogue SE TDV8 Rimini Red

Possible the compressor wasn't able to keep up with demand.

My mate had a similar issue which was caused by the sensor getting "confused".

He parked on level ground, took battery off for half an hour. Reset the steering sensor and it's been fine since. 08 model TDV8 Vogue SE Rimini Red/ parchment. 04 TD6 Vogue Oslo Blue / parchment
99 Model 2.5 DSE Rioja Red / lightstone
97 BMW M3 Evo Convertible
plus a few more!

Post #85363 4th Oct 2011 9:42pm
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barrieeld



Member Since: 07 Dec 2010
Location: Scotland
Posts: 260

Every time i stop the vehicle i always put the car into access mode as i like the suspension to keep flexing is this the correct method to keep the suspension active?

Post #85365 4th Oct 2011 9:52pm
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47p2



Member Since: 05 Oct 2010
Location: Gone Beyond, Subaru
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Scotland 

Some believe so, I personally don't bother

Post #85366 4th Oct 2011 9:53pm
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CG-SC



Member Since: 06 May 2011
Location: Falkirk
Posts: 528

2006 Range Rover Autobiography Supercharged Zambezi Silver

barrieeld wrote:
Every time i stop the vehicle i always put the car into access mode as i like the suspension to keep flexing is this the correct method to keep the suspension active?


Well I can hear the compressor when it runs due to the LPG relocation (not too loud, but audible) When you are aware how long it runs for and how hard the thing works you wouldn't put it into access mode every time you stop it !!

I leave mine in normal mode - occassionally I drop it and raise it but certainly not every time..... Stolen / Gone: 2006MY Supercharged LPG Autobiography - Zambezi Silver with Sand/Jet/Jet Oxford Leather.....

Post #85368 4th Oct 2011 10:04pm
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barrieeld



Member Since: 07 Dec 2010
Location: Scotland
Posts: 260

CG-SC wrote:
barrieeld wrote:
Every time i stop the vehicle i always put the car into access mode as i like the suspension to keep flexing is this the correct method to keep the suspension active?


Well I can hear the compressor when it runs due to the LPG relocation (not too loud, but audible) When you are aware how long it runs for and how hard the thing works you wouldn't put it into access mode every time you stop it !!

I leave mine in normal mode - occassionally I drop it and raise it but certainly not every time.....


True but then the other argument is leaving the vehicle in normal mode puts unwanted stress on the vehicle having to continually monitor the pressure while left parked overnight say?

Post #85373 4th Oct 2011 10:36pm
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ric355



Member Since: 02 May 2011
Location: Surrey, UK
Posts: 302

barrieeld wrote:

True but then the other argument is leaving the vehicle in normal mode puts unwanted stress on the vehicle having to continually monitor the pressure while left parked overnight say?


This is moot - if there are no leaks then nothing will happen. There is no "stress" in monitoring the height of the vehicle when it isn't changing. Conversely if it does change height then you have a leak and therefore already have something that needs fixing! I don't get the stress issue anyway - there's still air in the bags whether it is in access mode or normal mode. Just less of it in access mode but it's still holding up the weight of the body; it is not resting on the bump stops.

Obviously the more times you lower and raise the more wear there will be on the compressor. But using it isn't a bad thing - that's what it's for after all.

Just park it up and don't worry about it. The only reason to always put it in access mode would be if the owners handbook tells you. And I doubt it does.

Post #85376 4th Oct 2011 10:47pm
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Joe90



Member Since: 29 Apr 2010
Location: Hampshire
Posts: 6409

England 

Why oh why did I read this thread earlier today.

Popped down to the bank this afternoon - Air Susp Inactive message popped up, lights all off on the console. Ding when I switched off. Seems to have dropped a bit front drivers side. Switching car back on continues to give fault and no lights. So I now have a thrilling journey home at a careful speed Wink

So next steps? What is the likely problem? Have checked fuse 57 (15 amp) this is OK. .
Experience is the only genuine knowledge, but as time passes, I have forgotten more than I can remember Wink
Volvo V70 P2 2006 2.4 Petrol 170bhp Estate SE
MG Midget Mk1 1962

Previous: L322 Range Rover TDV8 3.6 2008; L322 Range Rover TD6 3.0 2002; P38A Range Rover V8 1999

Post #85447 5th Oct 2011 2:49pm
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stan
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Member Since: 13 Jul 2010
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United Kingdom 

joe, if you have time ,put "air suspension inactive" with the quotation marks into the search and there is tons of info re this...i had a quick read but didn't get a definitive answer, mind you a only read a few threads.. ... - .- -.




Y. O. L. O.
.

Post #85453 5th Oct 2011 2:57pm
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47p2



Member Since: 05 Oct 2010
Location: Gone Beyond, Subaru
Posts: 8048

Scotland 

Try disconnecting the battery for half an hour, though if it does re-set it will most likely pop up a fault as soon as you drive again.

It can be a Censored load of things that trigger the fault and not always Air Suspension orientated either. ABS, speed sensor, steering angle sensor, compressor overheat, relief valve on air tank.....the list goes on

Post #85457 5th Oct 2011 3:02pm
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Joe90



Member Since: 29 Apr 2010
Location: Hampshire
Posts: 6409

England 

@ scarey - that's what I've just been doing since I posted, just thought I would report the synchronicity of reading about the ASI problem and it then happening to me Big Cry Laughing

@47p2 - thanks for the suggestions, I'll try a few low tech fixes before running it over to my Indie. Most folks seemed to have had a split air bag on the drivers side. I don't seem to be on the bump stops though (although I have only ever felt what this is like in my P38 when the whole lot dropped on me one day Wink)

Just been out and prodded the airbags - OSR front soft - low height, NSL front hard - normal height, rear ones all OK, so looking like a dodgy air bag? .
Experience is the only genuine knowledge, but as time passes, I have forgotten more than I can remember Wink
Volvo V70 P2 2006 2.4 Petrol 170bhp Estate SE
MG Midget Mk1 1962

Previous: L322 Range Rover TDV8 3.6 2008; L322 Range Rover TD6 3.0 2002; P38A Range Rover V8 1999

Post #85467 5th Oct 2011 3:20pm
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