Air Susp. Compressor Broke, then fixed.

Zack

Turbo Marauder
Driving home yesterday and halfway home the light goes on. :mad2:

By the time I got to the driveway it was slammed to the ground, and raining cats and dogs, and I didnt have any room in the garage.

I found a small window in the weather to remove the compressor and I immediately knew it was water damage that caused the pump to quit...got it out, tore it down (quite simple I might add) and blew a ton of rust and corrosion out of the motor. Cleaned the brushes, wizz disked the housing (where it comes apart) then siliconed the mating surfaces and threw it back together.
IMHO this pump is defective by design, and I say that because the 2 parts of the pump motor housing have no seal...just a precision fit. Problem is both sides are aluminum and when corrosion starts, the seal is in jeopardy and ultimately let water enter in this case.

Works like new and is super quiet.
I would have taken pics but I was fighting the sun going down and rain.
I did it all in under an hour, and it was so super easy anyone can do this.
Total out of pocket cost: Zero Dollars.
 
Can we Sticky this and maybe have someone else do this process with pics included when their pump goes bad? These things seem to go bad fairly quickly! When I bought my car 3 years ago with 50k on it the pump went out the first week of me owning it! It was a warranty thing, but with my car having 100+k on it now, I am fearing it happen again. Just did the wacky wipers over the winter, so am waiting for this to quit out on me again! If it does, I might try this surgery and I will post pics, but we will see who's goes first!

Nice work ZACK ZILLAAAA! Ok, I have swung your juevos enough... getting down now.
 
First the sway bar, now this. :shake:Before you spend any more money fixing it, let me help you. By trading for Amy's 98 Honda Civic. :D

Driving home yesterday and halfway home the light goes on. :mad2:

By the time I got to the driveway it was slammed to the ground, and raining cats and dogs, and I didnt have any room in the garage.

I found a small window in the weather to remove the compressor and I immediately knew it was water damage that caused the pump to quit...got it out, tore it down (quite simple I might add) and blew a ton of rust and corrosion out of the motor. Cleaned the brushes, wizz disked the housing (where it comes apart) then siliconed the mating surfaces and threw it back together.
IMHO this pump is defective by design, and I say that because the 2 parts of the pump motor housing have no seal...just a precision fit. Problem is both sides are aluminum and when corrosion starts, the seal is in jeopardy and ultimately let water enter in this case.

Works like new and is super quiet.
I would have taken pics but I was fighting the sun going down and rain.
I did it all in under an hour, and it was so super easy anyone can do this.
Total out of pocket cost: Zero Dollars.
 
Can we Sticky this and maybe have someone else do this process with pics included when their pump goes bad?

Do a search on this forum, there is a step by step instruction with pictures of how to do the rebuild. I can't remember where exactly, but I seem to remember it was quite in-depth.

Jamie
 
mine is extra loud right now too and you feel it vibrating the whole car... im sure mine is bout to blow soon:mad2:
 
Well I guess I'm next, it went out when I was 20 miles from home, and rode that rough ridin' SOB all the way home. Is there a trouble shooting procedure written here to check what is bad? My friend says that if the air bag sensors are bad the pump won't come on.
 
We have a "Reviews" section just for these kinds of tips and "how to's." People just have to think to go look.
 
I thought the Reviews section was for people to give their impressions of products and of vendor service, etc...not for describing how to troubleshoot air compressors.
 
That's a good find, Jamie. :up:

Once I have the new compressor installed, I'll try Richy04's rebuild method and keep the old one as an emergency spare.
 
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