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Thread: EAS close call

  1. #1
    Join Date
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    EAS close call

    Last Sunday arvo we were at a family picnic near Swansea in NSW. I was booked on a flight from Newcastle airport later in the afternoon as I had to get back to Brisbane.

    My wife and I left the picnic and she drove me to the airport and was going back.

    Somewhere near Charlestown it came up with an EAS fault on the car and all of the ride height lights came on solid. It didn't drop to the bump stops though.

    I thought you bastard, I am racing to get a flight and leaving SWMBO with the possibility of the Rangie and a hard EAS fault miles from home. She was also going to be driving it home solo to Brisbane later in the week.

    Anyway, I was travelling with my laptop and I carry all of the cables and paraphernalia in the spare wheel well (under 12 tons of holiday crap).

    So we pulled up at the airport. I jump out and go and check in my bags and instruct SWMBO to go and park and start emptying the back so I can get the EAS unlock cable.

    I run back to the car, boot up the laptop, connect the cables, try to remember how to select which comms port is active, and soon have the EAS unlock diagnostics up on the screen and cleared the fault. I repeated the process one more time just to be sure, to be sure.

    Close down the laptop, run back to the terminal, through security, out the gate and onto the plane as one of the last to board. Close call.

    She never heard another peep out of the EAS all week, and drove back to Brisbane today without incident.

    So, if you have a P38, then make sure you avail yourself with at least the free EAS unlock tools, as it will always be the worst possible timing when you need it.

    Dave
    2011 Range Rover Sport SDV6 Autobiography
    2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
    2004 Freelander TD4 SE
    1997 Range Rover 4.6 HSE
    1994 Range Rover Vogue
    ----------------------------------------

  2. #2
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    I would never venture far from home without my netbook and eas leads. Since ownership I have had 2 events like yours plus another one that was caused by the compressor not running.
    I have the eas lead, 4 eas bypass valves and car handbook permanently in the glovebox. The bypass valves are worth their weight in gold when you really need them.

  3. #3
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    I'll have to check out the aftermarket gear for the EAS soon. Our RR lights up all 4 (or sometimes just 3) lights on the EAS panel & stays that way for the 1st 30sec or so after starting. Then the lights go off & all is good until the next time it starts up.

    The LR gear at work shows nothing wrong with the system .
    Scott

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Scouse View Post
    I'll have to check out the aftermarket gear for the EAS soon. Our RR lights up all 4 (or sometimes just 3) lights on the EAS panel & stays that way for the 1st 30sec or so after starting. Then the lights go off & all is good until the next time it starts up.

    The LR gear at work shows nothing wrong with the system .
    The lights should all come on, presumably part of a self test then go off. Mine go off after 5 to 10 secs and only one remains, hopefully the std ride hight.

  5. #5
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    The "slow 55kph" & extended mode light also come up on the dash when it happens too so there's a problem somewhere.
    Scott

  6. #6
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    Well done Dave, I hope your better half appreciated your gallantry

    Quote Originally Posted by Scouse View Post
    The "slow 55kph" & extended mode light also come up on the dash when it happens too so there's a problem somewhere.
    Scott - there is an EAS Unlock Cable over at Andy's place with your name on it

    Before I put the EAS Emergency Bypass Kit in mine, I carried a "pigtail cable" and the instructions from Rangerovers.net on how to hot-wire the EAS, after an incident on Boxing Day a couple of years ago. I am still appreciative of Ron's "mercy dash" to save us a very bumpy ride home that day.

    These days I go a little over the top:

    • EAS Emergency Bypass Kit
    • onboard air kit
    • manual air compressor in the boot
    • set of 6mm elbows and schraeder valves.
    • netbook with cigar lighter power adapter, RAVE ISO, EAS Unlock and Vehicle Explorer s/w
    • FaultMate MSV-2 Extreme
    • EAS Kicker Lite, or EAS Buddy (don't recall which, but it lives in the glovebox)
    • EAS Unlock Cable

    Cheers, Paul.
    My toys, projects and write-ups at PaulP38a.com

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by PaulP38a View Post
    Well done Dave, I hope your better half appreciated your gallantry



    Scott - there is an EAS Unlock Cable over at Andy's place with your name on it

    Before I put the EAS Emergency Bypass Kit in mine, I carried a "pigtail cable" and the instructions from Rangerovers.net on how to hot-wire the EAS, after an incident on Boxing Day a couple of years ago. I am still appreciative of Ron's "mercy dash" to save us a very bumpy ride home that day.

    These days I go a little over the top:

    • EAS Emergency Bypass Kit
    • onboard air kit
    • manual air compressor in the boot
    • set of 6mm elbows and schraeder valves.
    • netbook with cigar lighter power adapter, RAVE ISO, EAS Unlock and Vehicle Explorer s/w
    • FaultMate MSV-2 Extreme
    • EAS Kicker Lite, or EAS Buddy (don't recall which, but it lives in the glovebox)
    • EAS Unlock Cable
    Cheers, Paul.

    Bloody hell, how many EAS things can you get haha. You must really have a love/hate relationship with it LOL
    Last edited by milld; 21st January 2011 at 06:04 PM. Reason: typo

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    Narangba
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    EAS

    I always travel with the essentials

    1. EAS Kicker Lite
    2. RACQ Card
    3. Eternal optimism

    so far only item 1. required but item 3. always needed

    Cheers

    Rushy

  9. #9
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    I haven't mentioned it on here for a while, but there are a lot more P38 owners now, so what the heck.

    A few years ago I built myself an EAS manual controller based on the pigtail wiring principle, but instead of mucking around trying to remember which pins to jump I built it permanenetly into the car.

    I used a 25pin printer cable and soldered the appropriate wires into the back of the EAS ECU harness. This lives permanently under the passenger seat. The other end is all wired up into a controller box which lives in the spare wheel well.

    When I need it I simply plug in the 25 pin printer plug and can take control of the compressor and valve block, bypassing the ECU altogether.

    Some pics here
    http://www.aulro.com/afvb/technical-...ontroller.html

    Dave
    2011 Range Rover Sport SDV6 Autobiography
    2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
    2004 Freelander TD4 SE
    1997 Range Rover 4.6 HSE
    1994 Range Rover Vogue
    ----------------------------------------

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    hobart
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    EAS

    In my cubby box I carry a buddy box-usb version -and some air line connectors, an air line cutter, and in with the spare wheel, some airline(about 3 metres) and I carry an electric air pump. My vehicle also has a manual air recovery system(MARS) with 4 airline taps.
    When I was having trouble a couple of months back, when a fault came up on a long trip, I would pull the plug on the air pump and turn off the 4 taps and the vehicle would stay up all day.
    This had to be done quickly after the beeps, before the air was let out and the vehicle went to the bump stops.
    Sometimes I would apply the buddy box and clear the fault, only to have it come back in half to one hour, particularely on smooth road.
    I replaced the front right height sensor and all works fine now.

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