3rd week....2nd breakdown
Discussion
Hmmmm, not going well this!
I've been running my better halves Rangie for a week after it spat it's dummy out the last time she attempted a long journey in it, and it's been great.
5am this morning she tries to do the same journey again - and again the car's not happy.
She starts the engine and gets an EAS Failure. Great I think, leaking air suspension overnight perhaps? Compressor failure? One of the sensors on the blink?
So, after convincing her to take my car (which she hates at it's a tip) I head back to bed.
As I'm awake now and realistically won't sleep again, I figured I'd attempt to work out what's failed this time. Seems EAS failures are a result of either: knackered valves, compressor or air springs generally.
Having read the service history, most of the springs have been changed, and last night the system adjusted itself in seconds. So, I figure that rules out the springs, and there's a fair chance it's not the compressor.
So, sensors maybe? The car was on its bump stops when I got to it (which figures). So, I start it and all's well - no issue at all. The really strange thing is that according the Internet RR sites, an EAS failure is permanent and can only be reset using rovacomlite.
I assume that's not 100% accurate then? Anyone guess what happened (and how I can avoid it happening again without reverting to std springs?
thanks all!
D
edited to add: Ah, it seems there is a soft and hard error indicator (the soft one fixing itself without the need for a dealer reset). So, I had a soft fault but I won't know what it was without a dealer fleasing me 40 quid for the privilege). Figure I might need to buy some diagnostics kit if this is to continue and it's pretty crap at explaining errors.
I've been running my better halves Rangie for a week after it spat it's dummy out the last time she attempted a long journey in it, and it's been great.
5am this morning she tries to do the same journey again - and again the car's not happy.
She starts the engine and gets an EAS Failure. Great I think, leaking air suspension overnight perhaps? Compressor failure? One of the sensors on the blink?
So, after convincing her to take my car (which she hates at it's a tip) I head back to bed.
As I'm awake now and realistically won't sleep again, I figured I'd attempt to work out what's failed this time. Seems EAS failures are a result of either: knackered valves, compressor or air springs generally.
Having read the service history, most of the springs have been changed, and last night the system adjusted itself in seconds. So, I figure that rules out the springs, and there's a fair chance it's not the compressor.
So, sensors maybe? The car was on its bump stops when I got to it (which figures). So, I start it and all's well - no issue at all. The really strange thing is that according the Internet RR sites, an EAS failure is permanent and can only be reset using rovacomlite.
I assume that's not 100% accurate then? Anyone guess what happened (and how I can avoid it happening again without reverting to std springs?
thanks all!
D
edited to add: Ah, it seems there is a soft and hard error indicator (the soft one fixing itself without the need for a dealer reset). So, I had a soft fault but I won't know what it was without a dealer fleasing me 40 quid for the privilege). Figure I might need to buy some diagnostics kit if this is to continue and it's pretty crap at explaining errors.
Edited by _deejay_ on Monday 3rd July 07:13
triple7 said:
What car is this a P38? I qwould check the battery is not on its way out. It can cause all manner of fault codes to appear even with just a few volts short of the norm.
G
G
It is a p38 - I replaced the battery with a yellow top one last week (see first breakdown, 2nd week thread

I've no idea what it was playing at, it's been fine ever since, doesn't leak overnight, adjusts quickly etc. My best guess at the moment is a 'sensor out of range' error which is a soft fault....
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