Another quick update!
Everything seems to be working fine.
I get into the car in the morning, immediately at ride level, if there are even any adjustments needed.
Depending on where I park and if I still unload stuff, the EAS adjusts the truck to perfect level.
No visible lean or sag on any corners.
I have 1.5km of heavily washboarded, big pot holes and very curvy dirt road before hitting the paved road. Which also has lots of dips for drainage, many hairpin turns and is probably 12-15% grade, so lots of heavy breaking.
In other words the truck pitches and rolls A LOT on this track. That's why I wanted a P38 again. Pure comfort... you can drive this 20-50km...
In a regular car, you hit your head on the A and B columns and know yourself out if you are not lucky...
Once I am in the valley at the bottom of the hill. Road conditions can be called normal.
Did some testing... driving A to B in the valley. Arrive at B... EAS box "normal temp" (engine ambient), compressor not running. Door open or closed doesn't seem to matter.... reservoir appear to be full.
Shut off the car, close the door, maybe a couple clicks depending on where/how the car is parked.
Driving up my hill finishing on the 1.5km dirt road...
Sometimes the compressor even still runs for closet a minute... AND I can tell by the heat from the EAS box that the compressor has been running a lot, i.e. working hard! (probably compressor would almost be too hot to touch) I also always notice that the car lowers ever so slightly to normal ride height after shutting it off. Meaning it was slightly higher than normal. (I have a 30 degree approach coming downhill onto my flat driveway around a 90 degree turn, so that could be the cause. I notice when I open or shut my gate that the suspension is quite high on one side and I have an extra 10cm to climb down, because of the odd angle of the car in the turn and up/down hill. )
How much air does the EAS use if you are driving at good speed off road? Will it try to compensate for height sensor changes that fast. I.e. I drive through a pot hole or a sharp turn and the car sways with an easy 2 inch suspension travel and it will try to make up for that? Try to keep solid ground contact for the wheels at all time, would make sense... but that would also indicate that during a drive like that the EAS constantly blows off and refills the bags in (depending on the axle angles) pretty significant amounts. And their is now air recovery, hence the compressor runs a lot during this type of maneuver.
I have never really taken my Range Rovers for true off roading for longer durations.... mostly unpaved roads... and this road here for daily use is about the most off road I have taken any vehicle besides a tractor. And often several times a day.
So you tell me... more rugged means more EAS work to do, i.e. more air needed? Does that assessment seem correct?
Asking all this, because I want to get to the bottom of my originally worn out compressor...
I have no problem rebuilding compressors... if the issue is overuse on an intact system...
but if there is some other strange issue that can be resolved, then I'd obviously need to look into that.
But as the title of my post said... my perception is/was that I have a perfectly working EAS... and all seems to be running perfectly again...
If I was only driving on flat ground and normal roads... I'd have no reason for concern... minimal compressor use clearly.
But off road... this seems a different story...