Just crack the air line on the central valve block until you hear the hiss and then leave it until the hiss stops.
 Member
					
					
						Member
					
					
                                        
					
					
						I would imagine the air tank gets the bolt on the end cracked open slightly and de-pressurise the system. Think that might be the next job!!
Just crack the air line on the central valve block until you hear the hiss and then leave it until the hiss stops.
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
Or use your gap or rovacom tool and it's done in less than 30 seconds and you know it empty.
Has anybody fitted or considered adding a connection to the compressor or tank so you can fill tyres from it ??
 TopicToaster
					
					
						Subscriber
					
					
						TopicToaster
					
					
						Subscriberok makes sense, but what about if the tank reservoir ?
im thinking more for just topups that filling a deflated tyre
 Super Moderator
					
					
						Super ModeratorThe tank sits at 16.8 bar. A bit of plumbing required to make that work.
Aside from the previous comments on "don't do that, the compressor isn't designed for it" :
When the system pumps up, it brings air in, compresses it and pushes it through the dryer. When it farts, it takes that compressed, dry air and pushes it back through the dryer, ejecting some of the adsorbed moisture. It's a closed system.
If you go taking air from the closed system, you'll quickly saturate the dryer.
A quick calculation of my 255/55/R19 tyres would indicate a volume of somewhere in the order of 70L of air at atmospheric pressure (116L total volume minus 46L rim).
At 25psi, that's ~119L and at 40PSI that's 190L. So I'd need ~71L to go from 25->40 PSI.
The tank on the car is ~9L @ 16.8bar, so ~151L when full.
What do you define as a "topup" ?
There must be a zquillion posts on this on the forum.
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
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