RRSPORT.CO.UK

    Forum   Gallery   Shop   Sponsors
Home > Technical > Suspension calibration problem
Post Reply  Down to end
Page 1 of 1
 
walyhst



Member Since: 06 Sep 2018
Location: CHOPPINGTON
Posts: 5

United Kingdom 
Suspension calibration problem

Can anyone help me, I had rear passenger corner sagging a little so purchased a gap iid to diagnose the issue turns out it was the height sensor so I have replaced the sensor and tried to calibrate,it allows me to set all corners to 461mm but when go to save settings it says unable to save fault e50 can anyone shed some light on this

Post #566297 Thu Oct 04 2018 8:37pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
Brit Plumber



Member Since: 05 Jan 2018
Location: Sleaford, Lincolnshire
Posts: 1849

England 2012 Range Rover Sport Supercharged Autobiography Fuji White

Should the rear not be 465mm, fronts 461mm?

Have you done physical measurements from wheel centre to top of wheel arch? 2019 5.0 SC SVA (Current)
2012 5.0 SC AB. Sadly written off by a campervan
23 plate Focus ST (Current)
1942 VEP Ford GPW Jeep (Willys) (Current)
1943 Whites M16 Halftrack (Current)
16 plate Eurofighter Typhoon, 2 x Eurojet engines with 20,000lbs thrust each. 1380mph

Post #566303 Thu Oct 04 2018 9:48pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
walyhst



Member Since: 06 Sep 2018
Location: CHOPPINGTON
Posts: 5

United Kingdom 

Thanks for the reply, the iid tool says 461mm all way round, would 4mm make it not save settings? Im measuring from the centre of the hub to the wheel arch lip, Another thing not sure of but on a few posts on various forums it mentions the car needs to be in tight tolerance mode from what I understand it's done by removing the eas relay but just going off the guided calibration on the iid tool nothing is mentioned about tight tolerance mode

Post #566304 Thu Oct 04 2018 10:07pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
Brit Plumber



Member Since: 05 Jan 2018
Location: Sleaford, Lincolnshire
Posts: 1849

England 2012 Range Rover Sport Supercharged Autobiography Fuji White

No I don’t think tight tolerance mode is needed.

This is what I was going from.


Click image to enlarge
 2019 5.0 SC SVA (Current)
2012 5.0 SC AB. Sadly written off by a campervan
23 plate Focus ST (Current)
1942 VEP Ford GPW Jeep (Willys) (Current)
1943 Whites M16 Halftrack (Current)
16 plate Eurofighter Typhoon, 2 x Eurojet engines with 20,000lbs thrust each. 1380mph

Post #566305 Thu Oct 04 2018 10:13pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
Col



Member Since: 02 Sep 2012
Location: Hawkes Bay NZ
Posts: 4982

New Zealand 2013 Range Rover Sport Supercharged Autobiography Santorini Black

Might well be wrong here but if you have removed a EAS relay have you not in effect disabled the eas, so how is it able to know what you are trying to do as it will not be able to do anything. I think the tight tolerance mode is used primarily for 4 wheel alignment not suspension calibration. There are a lot of member on here who have done the calibration and I'm sure one will be along shortly to tell you where you may be going wrong.


Cheers
Col

Post #566307 Fri Oct 05 2018 12:29am
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
walyhst



Member Since: 06 Sep 2018
Location: CHOPPINGTON
Posts: 5

United Kingdom 

That's exactly what I thought col, maybe disabling the eas you can set the height baseline so it can't move the height itself to what ever the car thinks is level,yeh hopefully someone can help as I don't fancy RR dealer prices for labour

Post #566316 Fri Oct 05 2018 9:28am
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
Col



Member Since: 02 Sep 2012
Location: Hawkes Bay NZ
Posts: 4982

New Zealand 2013 Range Rover Sport Supercharged Autobiography Santorini Black

I can't see anything in the Gap Users Manual about removing the eas relay during calibration, but did see this.

CAUTION
The tight tolerance mode should only be used when a wheel alignment
is performed. Leaving the EAS ECU permanently in this mode
can lead to premature failing of components.

Cheers
Col

Post #566318 Fri Oct 05 2018 10:30am
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Post Reply
Post Reply  Back to top
Page 1 of 1
All times are GMT

Jump to  
Previous Topic | Next Topic >
Posting Rules
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum



Site Copyright © 2005-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis
RRSPORT.CO.UK RSS Feed - All Forums

Switch to Mobile site