On my continuing quest to iron out all the bugs in the suspension of my Xantia I've found yet another small (?) problem which I wonder if anyone else has. (Even if they don't know it yet
While working under the front of the car recently I noticed a hissing noise from the area of the pressure regulator after turning off the engine... after a bit of investigating I realised it was coming from the front hydractive control valve unit.
It seems that any time that it is activated, there is a significant amount of continous leakage from the HP inlet port (used to activate the control valve) to the overflow port. For those that havn't looked at the diagrams, its a double ended tapered needle valve operated by the magnetic field from the solenoid coil.
In the rest condition it blocks the HP inlet at one end, and opens the overflow end, and in the active condition the HP inlet opens and the overflow end is supposed to seal. It seems that the overflow end is not sealing 100%, most probably due to either wear, or particulate matter or grit fouling the seat.
Since I recently changed the oil and the old oil was full of grit (as well as being some kind of ATF) and I also recently cleaned the same grit out of the front height corrector it also seems likely the HA valve has the same problem and needs a good clean out.
One symptom of this leakage that I hadn't put 2 & 2 together about until now is a regulator cycle time that is excessively short despite a good accumulator sphere.
With the original flat accumulator that came on the car the cycle time was 15 seconds, and after replacing it it went up to 45 seconds, better, but by no means ideal.
Timing it recently I noticed the cycle time was back down to 18 seconds again, even though the accumulator still measures spot on 62 bars. After discovering the hissing of the valve I tried disconnecting the cable to the valve and timing the regulator cycle time - bingo, 3 minutes 45 seconds
So, HA2 valve disabled - 3 minutes 45 seconds, enabled, 18 seconds. Clearly there is significant leakage going on here, especially if its enough to hear hissing coming from it when listening close by.
Does anyone else want to try this test on their Hydractive 2 model to see if it happens to them too ?
Next time you have the front of the car up on stands, after running the engine turn the engine off, and then put your ear under the area of the regulator and hydractive control block and see if you can hear any hissing that stops when the solenoids shut off 10 seconds after closing the doors...... any audible hiss is a significant leak.
The other thing to try, much easier and probably more conclusive, is to measure the regulator cycle time with the Hydractive 2 computer fuse removed, or just unplug the cable going to the front valve as I did, and compare the time to when it is connected as per normal. A large difference in the cycle time indicates leakage.
I can see a number of potential side effects to this leakage, especially if the amount of leakage is variable. (As would be the case with grit stuck on the needle valve seat)
* Pressure regulator cycling frequently despite a good accumulator
* The "popping up in the air" effect some people get (including me) when lowering the suspension from the full height to normal height - caused by less than full pressure being available on the control side of the valve to force the valve into soft mode against the full suspension pressure
* The "dropping at the back after lifting" effect some people get (mine does it occasionally) where while lifting in the morning it lifts at the back, then the front, and THEN the back drops (HA valve opening) and lifts again. (Again due to a pressure drop on the control side of the valve)
* Height not correcting back down after getting out of the car unless you get out pretty quickly (after turning off the motor the accumulator pressure is quickly bled away causing the anti-sink valves to be shut, especially if you leave the doors open for a while before getting out)
* Possibly longer than usual lifting time due to some of the pumping action of the pump being wasted by the leakage. (And the 6+2 pump doesn't have much output to begin with.....)
* Potentially intermitant harsh ride as the hydractive control valve may not stay reliably in the soft mode when it should, if there is much less than full pressure on the control side of the valve a large bump (causing a pressure increase on the other end) may be enough to cause the control valve to move partially towards the hard state during the ride over the bump...(speculating a bit on this one...)
Any comments ?
Regards,
Simon