Gents! Thank you very much for your help with this. This forum is truely great.
A bit more info. I reassembled it last night, with various stop-gap o-rings, original seals etc. It would appear that in fact while the seals may be shot, the motor may also be goosed. Even with an imperfect seal, as you load it up (ie finger over the outlet) the motor really struggles, slows, and eventually stops. So if it is trying to pump agains 100-odd psi, that is clearly not going to happen. So its going to be a new compressor anyway.
Kurt: an alternative part may well do the trick. Like the one Ken posted, a landie/ range rover one may suffice. Worth a bash if its cheap, and I could probably get the fittings to work (with a bodge, and a bit of araldite!)
Andy:
Does it have a levelling valve or is the ride height set from an electrical sensor? Do you just need it to level or do you need to go to different heights? One height is easier on the compressor.
Pre-set level, measured with a (?potentiometer) on the back axle, linked to the ECU. Incidently, the ECU just switches on/off a solenoid to work the compressor. It also has an air tank of 10L, with a max of 11 bar (160 psi)
If you've got a levelling valve and better still a small reservoir, pull the fuse on the ECU, fill the reservoir to 3 bar/40 psi with a tyre compressor and go for a drive. If you can do half an hour/20 miles and still be roughly level the tyre compressor is up to the job and you just need to rig a pressure switch to trigger it to run. If it won't, the duty cycle is beyond a tyre compressor. The duty cycle is something like 3 minutes on, 17 off if you want it to live. If anything leaks the tyre compressor will run to destruction, but hopefully you'd hear it.
I suspect it may have a bit of a leak (thus possible failure of the compressor!) but it was ever thus. May well use my tyre compressor as a stop gap so I can use the van. Someone else suggested this. But agreed, its going to be hard on the compressor! Tho I may just switch it on & off manually until I get one switched via the ride height sensor / tank pressure sensor.
....build a new system. ....Parts for this will run to over £200.
ECAS sensors are much of a muchness, so any 12V compressor unit could work. A Rangerover or BMW unit might get you going, but you'd need to find the wiring diagrams for that particular item before you'd know how to power it, level it and so on. I could get diagrams for WABCO units if you can find a unit, but I'm guessing a pneumatic fix will be simpler.
Andy for info and, but the ECU just switches on a relay, so may be more simple than that. I know someone (oviously with a better "downstream" system than mine on a Merc Vito), who just tops it up every now and again with an airline. Not going to go that route, but you see the principle.
Ken:
Andy send me your vin number or reg number. We have good working relationship with our LDV agent i will get them to make a real effort. I do know that Mercedes have a compressor for the brakes on the vario so i am guessing several others may do including range rover. As said you need to know if it just pumps or is it a combined level unit. Maybe a quality tyre compressor as i don't think it will pump all the time but just when you load it and it needs to compensate.
That would be great, but I fear horrific cost, as I will likely need a motor too.... Would be great if you could try tho?? Its L928 JFS, LDV 400, ambulance body.
I may take a punt on that range rover/Landie/Disco part on Ebay, however it is the WABCO that Andy was decrying!! However, anything will do just now. Its not a quality vehicle, so doesnt need quality parts!!!
Cheers guys. I owe you all a beer!
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