alanlucas

Well-Known Member
Guys,

Am thinking of converting mine back to air suspension.
Car was converted to springs before I bought it.
Only the airbags and height sensors are missing and the ecu is jumpered to manual.
Strange thing happened today though when I started it to make sure the battery hadn't gone flat.
After I switched the engine off I could hear something running in the eas box for about 20 seconds and then switched off.
In case it was a fluke I started the car again and switched off and heard it running again for the same length of time and then stopping.
In 4 years of ownership I have never had a peep out of the EAS unit as it was disabled to all intents and purposes..
Any ideas or is my vehicle psychic and getting itself ready for its new airbags and height sensors ? lol.
The pump relay was removed from the fusebox when I fitted a new fusebox 4 years ago
 
The eas pump isn't supposed to run when the engine is off, are you sure that's what it was making the noise?
If there's no relay there's no power
 
You'll need 4 Dunlop height sensors and bags

And a recalibration - add on a compressor and valveblock rebuild and the removal of the manual override..

Worth it though, a P38 on EAS is far better than any Coil sprung jobby.
 
Pump relay in fuse box or the 'relay' (timer) under the px seat?
pump relay was removed at the time of fitting a new fusebox - haven't checked the relay timer.
there shouldn't be any power going to the unit and its never happened before in 4 years of ownership.
I took the lid off but there wasn't any vibration from the pump itself, but something was definitely oscillating in the eas box
 
As my first 'proper post' I got to ask, I am in the same boat, I just bought a P38, that had a spring conversion 15 years ago, and so think going back to air suspension might be a good idea.
Would the quality of a new air suspension system be better than anything Land Rover ever did?
 
As my first 'proper post' I got to ask, I am in the same boat, I just bought a P38, that had a spring conversion 15 years ago, and so think going back to air suspension might be a good idea.
Would the quality of a new air suspension system be better than anything Land Rover ever did?
There was nothing wrong with LR's system the only reason it falls on its face is due to lack of owner understanding and maintenance.

You have to see what's been removed, some even remove the sensors with a coil conversion "for some reason".

It'll need a valveblock rebuild + compressor rebuild assuming it still has them fitted.
4 airsprings and the manual override removed at a minimum..

And hopefully the EAS lines have been capped..
 
I think most if not everyone who goes back to air, uses the stock setup, there are different airbags available but they aren't cheap
 
I agree with Henry B.
Poor maintenance or maybe the cost of new airbags 15 years ago. When i bought mine, it needed a new front prop, aircon condensor, cabin air filters, wiper blades, scuttle foam, digital amp as it was missing along with the cd changer, tyres, new front window regulators, discs, calipers and pads and hoses. Also front door lock linkage clips and door cards and parcel shelf. also rocker gaskets and ht leads. Every car I have ever owned has been put back to perfect working order. Putting mine back on Eas will be fairly straightforward so long as you proceed methodically and logically. New bags and sensors, connect it all up and test for air leaks and take it from there. If pump is dodgy change all the seals and renew the dessicant in the drier. Get the eas sofware and lead & also an ELM lead and obd software too for your engine ecu.
 
yep. if you are loaded, get the arnott bags - i'm sticking with the original dunlops

So as a general rule, when something is way more expensive in Range Rover world, is it going to last longer, and generally be worth the difference in price, or is brand snobbery?
I noticed the Arnott bags are about £90 a corner compared to £50 for the Dunlops, so wondering what you get for twice the money?
 
So as a general rule, when something is way more expensive in Range Rover world, is it going to last longer, and generally be worth the difference in price, or is brand snobbery?
I noticed the Arnott bags are about £90 a corner compared to £50 for the Dunlops, so wondering what you get for twice the money?
They are tapered and have a stainless retaining clip at the top. Supposed to be superior to the dunlops. As to whether they last longer god knows but they have a 5 year guarantee versus 2 years for dunlops
 

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