Get yourself the Diagnostic Lead and software from Datatek (member on here) he sells them for less than £20 I believe....
Plug your vehicle in and read the faults....without diagnostics we could be guessing til noon next Saturday....
Most likely feeding a leak, time to get the soapy water out and check the bags and pipe connections!
Thanks all, I do have lead and cd, but laptop has no serial and no cd drive, one of those little useless laptops. So I may just have to get a old laptop that will do the job.
I am in Brighton and will get a usb to serial and download software. Thanks for help
edited for accuracyBrave driving a Rangie in Brighton - peak number of queers per square mile in the world!
edited for accuracy
Blackpool is a close second.
Edingburgh is reckoned to be secondBlackpool is a close second.
Thank God I do not live in the centre of Brighton but just at the downs. I bought the RR as I am going back to France to live, lived in France for 7 odd years then 1 year in Austria and then came back to UK. Now after 1 year in UK decided to go back to France where a 4x4 is needed as when it snows I cannot get out until it thaws a little and have a steep track to get up. Snows not the problem but the compact ice underneath. Also the RR will be useful on the land for pulling things out and around. Anyway to day the system is back to normal, so whats going on there then.
As I said, it was a soft fault, quite likely a height sensor giving a duff reading, you still need diagnostics. Mine's pretty reliable but I would never leave home without the EAS diagnostics just in case.Thank God I do not live in the centre of Brighton but just at the downs. I bought the RR as I am going back to France to live, lived in France for 7 odd years then 1 year in Austria and then came back to UK. Now after 1 year in UK decided to go back to France where a 4x4 is needed as when it snows I cannot get out until it thaws a little and have a steep track to get up. Snows not the problem but the compact ice underneath. Also the RR will be useful on the land for pulling things out and around. Anyway to day the system is back to normal, so whats going on there then.
Today during round trip to Ferndown (185miles), I had the "random high mode" about 5-6 times. Four times I managed to press the down switch in time and avoided the fault mode, but twice I missed it, and EAS went into fault mode. Reset each time with Nanocom & continued journey.
So for the last 50 miles I thought, lets try data logging on the Nanocom and catch the fault. . . . . . no further problems . . so my wife says "just connect it when you drive !
Does Nanocom usually prevent EAS faults while connected ?
History:
Already bypassed the white connectors in left footwell:- soldered joints instead of green corrosion.
Connectors in engine bay look good. Still need to check sensor connectors.
Compressor seals & piston seal replaced 3 weeks ago:- good pressure before & excellent now.
Replaced all seals in Valve block yesterday:- no more leak from exhaust outlet.
All height sensors give similar readings on Nanocom at all height settings. . . might be glitchy, but does't look like it on Nano.
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I now suspect driver pack strangeness but being an electronics engineer, I want to investigate rather than part-swap.
- So, firstly does anybody have an internal diagram for driver pack ?
- Are the 12V switched inputs from ECU filtered for vehicle noise ? (maybe the capacitors have dried out)
- Do the height sensor inputs to ECU have sensible low-pass filtering ? (I'm sure the ECU does not need to know every small bump on the road)
My thoughts are to start fitting additional capacitors to the ECU & Driver Pack inputs to remove random vehicle electrical noise. Many years ago I designed a variable wipe system form my old XJ6, and you would not believe how random the wipers were until I filtered the electronics properly.
BTW, In case anyone finds it useful, I just uploaded the Land Rover "EAS - System Information Document" I found on Nano forums, to the EAS sticky section in How-To's.
Pete