A small glass jar with male and female quick connects in the lid would sit perfectly inline where the current join in the vacuum pipe is between NRV and booster.
Then again mine lasted 14 years so not bad.
It makes perfect sense when you think about it. The Booster is a large vacuum reservoir. When the donk stops, there is vacuum on one end and a pump sealed with oil on the other end. No different to a large refrigeration system and an oil sealed vane vacuum pump. Cut the power off and the vacuum in the reservoir will quickly suck all the oil from the pump.
The thing about NRVs is they all leak. Slowly perhaps, but they leak. The best solution would be something like the relief valve on an air compressor such than when you stop the engine it relieves the vacuum. Could be easily implemented by a solenoid Tee to atmosphere controlled by the ignition switch, but then presents a failure mode where if the solenoid fails you lose vacuum assist.
A small glass jar with male and female quick connects in the lid would sit perfectly inline where the current join in the vacuum pipe is between NRV and booster.
Then again mine lasted 14 years so not bad.
It's also not necessarily liquid oil. Oil vapor transports nicely and then condenses in the booster.
Did you have the recall fix done on this about 12 years ago - mine was recalled in Dec 2010 to have the oil in the booster problem fixed and the injector pump recall also done.
I know the booster recall was not the solution for a few but for most it worked fine - no issues with mine in 12 years of ownership.
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
It was done prior to my purchase in mid 2010.
Pop the connector apart in front of the booster and see if you see any oil drip out of the vac line.
Edit: now I’ve driven it a bit I reckon the RRS booster upgrade is 20-30% more powerful. Stopping power is really improved. It could be because the old one was fading. I always thought when I changed to the Akebono pads that the brakes lost a lot of bite but it was worth it. It’s like it’s back to before and better now.
Read the fault code (P006A) and had a look under the engine cover… split manifold by the look… about $2200 worth when I had the driver’s side replaced last year
I have it booked in next week for belts and was planning on doing alternator and water pump at the same time. Looking like an expensive service…![]()
Everything is easy when someone else is doing it
MY14 SDV6 SE Corris Grey
Compomotive 18s : D697s : Traxide DBS : LLAMS : ARB compressor : IC-455
Rhino Platform : GOE compressor, Tx & front bash plates, deluxe sliders
When the lh one on my 3.0 went, I replaced both manifolds, the logic being both have seen the same number of thermal and pressure cycles. From memory it was about 1400-1600 all up to do both and took them half a day.
Yes, makes sense Eric and I did toy with the idea but the saving to do both at the same time wasn’t huge so I took a gamble. It has lasted another 14 months so I’m ok with that. If I had have been planning to travel anywhere remote I would have done both.
That price seems very low. Was that recent?
David
Everything is easy when someone else is doing it
MY14 SDV6 SE Corris Grey
Compomotive 18s : D697s : Traxide DBS : LLAMS : ARB compressor : IC-455
Rhino Platform : GOE compressor, Tx & front bash plates, deluxe sliders
doing new front brake pads and oil/filter change after work.
Going to Penrite HPR 5 5W-40.
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