JamesBB
Active Member
You can think what you want. I just said it is suspicious that it failed within about an hour of coming off of their ramp. It may have failed immediately it was lowered, it is just I did not pick it up for an hour or 2. I have not mentioned their name, as they are generally good guys. They are 4x4 specialists and some are ex-LR.I've not read this entire thread, but I think your being a little unfair to your garage.
I usually do all my own work, but when I've asked for simple things from auto-electricians, like crimping on new battery terminals they refuse to do the work because they don't want a response similar to yours just because the P38 is in a bad mood that day. Lot's of places refuse basic work on these cars.
We choose to live with these grumpy cars, we need to put up with it and take responsibility when they misbehave. Which they will.
Short of cutting/drilling through an air hose, I can't think of anything that the garage could have done that they are responsible for.
If lifting it on a high lift over-extended the bags due to the wrong dampers being fitted, or moved the sensors into a dodgy region, then that's a fault with the car.
The fact that somehting packed in on the day they had it really could be just dumb luck. The fact it's been faultless for years just means you're overdue something breaking.
If it really is a failure of all four bags, then there's somehting else with with the suspension set-up that made them vulnerable to being extended.
Sorry if this sounds like I'm having a go, and maybe you've already come to this conclusion, but the quicker we accept that these things just happen, the sooner we'll be happy with our somewhat terrible life choices, and if we all follow this, garages may be more supportive with us.
All air springs are folded in on themselves, immediately after being up on a 2-post lift for 4 hours (not sure why so long) with suspension dangling. No modifications to suspension at all, all stock. The car was dropped back to the ground with insufficient air in the bags. I have been warned that can cause them to fold over on themselves. How otherwise could these have folded in on themselves when it was working 1 hour previous to their work, working well enough to pass an MOT with no advisories?
They already openly admitted that something has seemed to damage the rear height sensors. Do not know how, they replaced them free of charge. They have not charged me to do any other work on the car, at their request (not mine as I was expecting to pay them something for their time. So I do not see how I am being unfair. I am not pursuing anything with them on this failure, and have not decided to stop using them.
Whatever has happened, is that it threw an EAS FAult. That then brought to the surface the underlying problem of bad wiring. That is not their fault, it is the overall bad design of the car that allows rain to get in there and corrode.
I will be carrying on with this on my own with the help of the excellent advice from the knowledgeable people on this forum.