2nd time was three weeks ago when my height sensors threw a fault that could not be cleared, and had to be towed on flatbed 200 miles. (Thank you AAA Premier!) Cost 1,200 at dealer for 4 sensors.
Great info. Mack73, thanks. Is there a workaround for if you don't have NAV to know which height sensor is the culprit?
^^^JimBiram, when you blew head gaskets at 123k had you ever done any cooling system maintenance such as flushes, etc.? How many years into ownership was that? I am kind of surprised to hear about the blown head gaskets in the LR3 at only 123k miles.
I am 99% sure you could have trail fixed this with just a little more knowledge.
1. Move to the flattest section of ground you can find.
2. Use the IIDTool to clear the fault to get the compressor to kick on
3. When the suspension has returned to a full height (or a height you think is acceptable), Pull 2 fuses from the under hood fuse box that control A) The air dump valves and B) The terrain response system
By pulling the fuses it will prevent the air dump valves from every opening (trapping the air inside) and with terrain response disabled it won't yell at you for the faults.
If the height sensor is soo out of whack and immediately throws a fault when you try to clear it with the IIDTool, look on your NAV 4x4 info screen to find the height sensor that is off, then jack up that corner of the vehicle (Or disconnect the height rod and manually move it to a position where the fault will clear).
I have always been able to get a rig back up to an acceptable height when a 'dump to bump stops' fault is thrown, and I offroad with 90% LR3's so it happens from time to time.
I am 99% sure you could have trail fixed this with just a little more knowledge.
1. Move to the flattest section of ground you can find.
2. Use the IIDTool to clear the fault to get the compressor to kick on
3. When the suspension has returned to a full height (or a height you think is acceptable), Pull 2 fuses from the under hood fuse box that control A) The air dump valves and B) The terrain response system
By pulling the fuses it will prevent the air dump valves from every opening (trapping the air inside) and with terrain response disabled it won't yell at you for the faults.
If the height sensor is soo out of whack and immediately throws a fault when you try to clear it with the IIDTool, look on your NAV 4x4 info screen to find the height sensor that is off, then jack up that corner of the vehicle (Or disconnect the height rod and manually move it to a position where the fault will clear).
I have always been able to get a rig back up to an acceptable height when a 'dump to bump stops' fault is thrown, and I offroad with 90% LR3's so it happens from time to time.
In my case the other systems didn't matter because with oversize tires I could barely crawl without rubbing tires or avoiding brush and rocks underneath. Lesson learned...at some point around 150k miles, more electric and moving parts are just going to wear out.
I am 99% sure you could have trail fixed this with just a little more knowledge.
1. Move to the flattest section of ground you can find.
2. Use the IIDTool to clear the fault to get the compressor to kick on
3. When the suspension has returned to a full height (or a height you think is acceptable), Pull 2 fuses from the under hood fuse box that control A) The air dump valves and B) The terrain response system
By pulling the fuses it will prevent the air dump valves from every opening (trapping the air inside) and with terrain response disabled it won't yell at you for the faults.
If the height sensor is soo out of whack and immediately throws a fault when you try to clear it with the IIDTool, look on your NAV 4x4 info screen to find the height sensor that is off, then jack up that corner of the vehicle (Or disconnect the height rod and manually move it to a position where the fault will clear).
I have always been able to get a rig back up to an acceptable height when a 'dump to bump stops' fault is thrown, and I offroad with 90% LR3's so it happens from time to time.