rrc eas is good..and reliable if serviced!!
but as it all is under the chassis.no one services it!!!hense it ****s up..
bags need changing every 5 yrs or so...but as they cost 36 a courner so what!
i'd suggest you renew the inlet filter and exhaust silencer and take with you a couple of height sensors. also maybe plumb in some manual bypass valves and carry a small 12v aux compressor. that and your spare airsprings will see you through 90% of whatever might happen. to go a step further replace all the o'rings at each connection, drain the receiver tank and replace desiccant in air dryer. step further overhaul the compressor. a step further still, overhaul the valve block.
i'd suggest you renew the inlet filter and exhaust silencer and take with you a couple of height sensors. also maybe plumb in some manual bypass valves and carry a small 12v aux compressor. that and your spare airsprings will see you through 90% of whatever might happen. to go a step further replace all the o'rings at each connection, drain the receiver tank and replace desiccant in air dryer. step further overhaul the compressor. a step further still, overhaul the valve block.
I would not plumb in bypass valves, just one more place for a possible leak, instead carry a set of valves that fit the pipes and pop the pipes from the valve block and fit the valves in an emergency, £24 on Ebay or make your own. I would do all of the rest and also carry 5 metres of pipe and some couplers, very light, takes up little space.![]()
OK, thanks Datatek. I was gonna PM you actually, does your software/lead combo work on Classic EAS or only on the P38's?
The RSW software for the EAS is I think available for the classic, have a look at www.rswsolutions.com Sorry the cable I do is P38 only, I could do them for the Classic but have no means of testing them.
The Classic Range Rover EAS uses an identical EAS communications protocol to that of the P38 Range Rover. The same EASunlock software will work with the Classic Range Rover. The primary difference is the cable connector and the addition of some signaling transistors.
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Thanks Datatek. Just been reading through their site and found this:
Is this something you could produce?
Thanks rasheed - you seem to know a lot about these. From time to time, and not all the time, the EAS compressor seems to be running for quite a while any ideas why that would be? As I said, its not all the time so don't think its a leak...
I would not plumb in bypass valves, just one more place for a possible leak, instead carry a set of valves that fit the pipes and pop the pipes from the valve block and fit the valves in an emergency, £24 on Ebay or make your own. I would do all of the rest and also carry 5 metres of pipe and some couplers, very light, takes up little space.![]()
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