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Home > General > Off Road Ride height |
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shmoogle Member Since: 07 Sep 2005 Location: ... and for every sprinkle I find, I shall kill you! Posts: 24350 |
This is quite normal and made the wife jump out of her skin the first time she heard it happen It's the suspension sitting back down again, the compressors don't need to be stressed when the car is sitting there doing nothing so it's a rest state for the system.
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Mon Jan 09 2006 4:22pm |
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Persuader Member Since: 21 Oct 2005 Location: Wakefield Posts: 88 |
I find it really hard to get 25MPG anyway not just in a parking garage. 2013 New Range Rover Sport HSE SDV6 2008 Audi Q7 4.2 TDI 2006 Toyota Vigo Truck 3.0D4D. |
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Mon Jan 09 2006 7:09pm |
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Pelyma Member Since: 28 Sep 2005 Location: Sussex Posts: 1497 |
This is known as the Disco fart!!! |
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Mon Jan 09 2006 8:09pm |
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mnederlof Member Since: 26 Jul 2005 Location: Westport, CT Posts: 30 |
OK, I admit it, i can't visualize how the air suspension works. I visualize some air pistons of some sort. Pump them full of air, the car rises, release air, the car lowers. I've read references to cross-linking such that air can be ducted from one side to the other for that neat articulation trick off road. I assume there are stops so that when all the air is out, the car settles to a certain level. If access is the lowest level, isn't that where the car settles to when it's "at rest (ie: the compressor has to do no more work)? There have been several posts that "automatic lowering" of the car to access height would be dangerous and cannot be enabled. Then what is my f*rting RRS doing? Why is the at-rest level higher than access (which I suspect it is)? Does anyone have a link or document they can refer me to to read about how the air suspension really works if this isn't correct? Thanks M 2006 RRS SC 2006 RR HSE |
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Mon Jan 09 2006 10:54pm |
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grommet Member Since: 28 May 2005 Location: Northern California Posts: 299 |
mnederlof, your vehicle doesn't lower or "drop to a certain level" while you are out. There is no "at rest" height. As you know, you don't even need to put the vehicle in Access mode; it can stay in On-Road height... and it'll stay like that. It will not lower unless you step inside and tell it to lower.
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Mon Jan 09 2006 11:08pm |
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Renny Member Since: 01 Jun 2005 Location: Fife Posts: 21 |
The noise you hear is the air system compensating for the reduced load after you have got out
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Tue Jan 10 2006 9:12am |
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shmoogle Member Since: 07 Sep 2005 Location: ... and for every sprinkle I find, I shall kill you! Posts: 24350 |
OK, so what is my car doing when I pull up on my driveway, turn the engine off, get out and lock the doors? Every time there is a "psstt!" and the car settles to it's lowest setting (which I've always presumed to be access height). The reason I think it's access height is that when I get back in the car and turn the engine on, the car automatically raises to what I presume to be on-road height. I can then manually drop the car back to access height and if I look at the tyre/arch spacings they are the same as when the car is parked up and switched off.
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Tue Jan 10 2006 10:28am |
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PaulB Member Since: 10 Dec 2005 Location: UK Posts: 546 |
That doesn't sound right...does it ?
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Tue Jan 10 2006 11:13am |
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mnederlof Member Since: 26 Jul 2005 Location: Westport, CT Posts: 30 |
Grommet, you may be right, but my vehicle *does* lower. It lowers quite a lot, and yes, it is when the doors are closed. It usually goes something like I get out, close my door, maybe get something out of the rear, close that, and lock using the key. THEN it pssts, and lowers visibly, every time. My car is getting a scratch fixed, so it's away for a few days when it's back, I'll measure the space between tire and wheel well. I don't think I'm an isolated case.
OK, this might be the case...I do weigh quite a bit more than a couple of sacks of cement (is that what my wife means when she's yelling and refering to a sack of ...) but we're talking about an adjustment at rest, with the engine off. It also waits until the car is off and locked (or at least the doors are closed). The height does change. 2006 RRS SC 2006 RR HSE |
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Tue Jan 10 2006 11:58am |
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shmoogle Member Since: 07 Sep 2005 Location: ... and for every sprinkle I find, I shall kill you! Posts: 24350 |
That is exactly what mine does too. I'd assumed it was normal - the explanation I gave myself seemed to make sense I was reading the handbook sections about the air suspension this morning and it's true it doesn't make any mention of any "at rest" location or any indication that this is what it should be doing.
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Tue Jan 10 2006 1:30pm |
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thebishman Member Since: 21 Dec 2005 Location: Kansas, USA Posts: 98 |
It is NOT normal for the RRS to 'automatically' lower to access height when you stop and turn off the car, UNLESS you have specifically requested the car to do that just prior to turning it off.
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Tue Jan 10 2006 3:20pm |
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PaulB Member Since: 10 Dec 2005 Location: UK Posts: 546 |
Bish,
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Tue Jan 10 2006 3:44pm |
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shmoogle Member Since: 07 Sep 2005 Location: ... and for every sprinkle I find, I shall kill you! Posts: 24350 |
What can I say, mine is definitely doing that - always has. Looks like another entry for the snagging list when it goes in for the 12k service. Odd.
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Tue Jan 10 2006 3:47pm |
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mnederlof Member Since: 26 Jul 2005 Location: Westport, CT Posts: 30 |
I don't know---I don't mind at all. As long as the extra compressor work (pretty much always starts when I start the car, which seems normal) doesn't hurt, I like the fact that it lowers; it makes ingress and egress easier, WITHOUT having to remember to hit the button, as I had to on my former full sized RR. If I didn't have this bug...er...feature, I'd likely be wishing I had it anyway, so unless there's a problem, I'm not saying anything! 2006 RRS SC 2006 RR HSE |
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Tue Jan 10 2006 4:14pm |
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