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Thread: Leans - HWH Issue?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
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    Default Leans - HWH Issue?

    Good afternoon,

    I have the slow leans when I don't think I should be leaning. Here are the facts and sequence (as best I understand them.)

    1. Pulled into Hilton Head about 6 days ago. Site was level. Bubble on left console was 100% within the circle.

    2. While engine is running and key on - pressed HWH - Level Air button once, received red light. Push again - solid red light. I assume since bus is level the HWH system didn't need to do any adjustment. Shut off engine and key.

    3. After about 4 days I notice we are leaning slightly to the right. I check Aux air - it is running around 90 psi. I hear the compressor run occasionally.

    4. When bus is in storage and aux air is off, I have a slow leak on right side.

    5. I assumed with HWH system active and aux air pressure at 90 psi, the HWH system would adjust the system when it started to lean.

    6. After 6 days and the kitchen drawers starting to slide out I started the bus and brought it back to level.

    7. Based on Jon's suggestion to another "leaner" I measured the amount of change from the lean position to the travel position. Below is the amount of drop. Measured at fender between rear tires and body behind front tires.

    Left Front - 2 inches
    Left Rear - 2 1/4 inches

    Right Front - 4 1/4 inches
    Right Rear - 4 3/8 inches

    8. I took Hector's air suspension seminar in February but had only owned the bus 3 days at the time. You might say I was a little over-whelmed. One thing I thought I understood was that HWH system would actively maintain the bus at level.

    Is my understanding of HWH system and maintaining level correct? If so, how do I test the HWH system?

    Should I be looking in a different direction?

    Thanks for your help.

    Terry

  2. #2
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    Terry,

    My understanding of the HWH is it is an electrical over ride of the Prevost Level Low system only. If I am wrong on this I hope someone corrects that statement.

    Whether the converter set it up to maintain level with the key off or not is something HWH and specifically Vantare experts have to address. If it works to maintain level with the key off it will wear you and your aux compressor out on a windy night. It will likely not ever be able to raise the front, and depending on your tag and drive axle weights it may not at 90 PSI level the rear because the compressor doesn't maintain 90 PSI, it just reaches 90 PSI before it cuts out. The cut in pressure may be 70 PSI and that may be less than the air bags have in them when the coach has been leveled.

    Now getting back to the issue of the leans. As I stated previously get to Austin if you can. Hector and John Klopp are putting on the air systems seminar and your full detailed explaination will be covered.

    For the moment I think the Vantare / HWH experts need to define how your specific coach is set up to handle leveling with the key off. It is usually not done, but yours might. In fact if it is set up that way I would modify it to eliminate that feature because it will actually make the coach lean faster on a windy night because of pressure limitations.

    Then I think you have to consider unless your air bags and Norgrem valves have been replaced. You may have aged out your components. The first notice is when the coach leans. If you get into cold weather, what is a slow lean in warm weather shows up dramatically as things get cold.

    Here's free advice, woirth every cent you pay for it.......consider air bag and suspension Norgren valve replacement. Get quotes and make an appointment. You might as well get it right instead of suffering with it and then fixing it for the next folks that buy your coach. If you have a place to work, and some tools (there is nothing special required) it is something you can easily do yourself as a number of us have.
    Last edited by Jon Wehrenberg; 09-13-2011 at 04:40 PM.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
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    Ft. Myers, FL
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    Default

    Thanks Jon,

    I should clarify something on HWH system. It is not continuous adjustment, it activates every 30 minutes and checks and adjusts.

    Most Norgren valves are less then 4 years old. Not sure on age of bags.

    I will schedule a trip through CoachWorx on the way back down to Fort Myers.

    Thanks

    Terry

  4. #4
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    You will be in good hands with the fellows at Coach Worx.

    If the HWH is leveling with the key off think about this for a moment.

    To lift your front end with the air bags I will bet is going to require more than 100PSI and I know some coaches that are fat in front can require as much as 120 PSI. So if your aux system cannot reach and maintain those pressures nothing is going to happen when the HWH asks for the front to be raised.

    As to the rear.... We have had some nights in the coach when the wind was blowing we could actually feel the coach rocking. If the HWH is continuous or is sampling every 30 minutes it is at some point going to read an out of level situation due to the winds. If the wind is pushing the side and it compresses the lee side air bag while extending the windward side air bag it is going to call for the release of air in one side and a charge of air in the other, when in fact if left alone a good leak free system will not require anything so instead your aux air system is going to be asked every 30 minutes to make adustments. My rear air bags start to raise the coach at 70 PSI. I don't know their pressure when at ride height. My point is your rear air bag pressures may be within the compressor control switch range and even though HWH thinks air needs to be added (or depleted) the aux system isn't going to because the pressure isn't low enough to trigger the aux compressor.

    When a non HWH coach is leveled, and the key is off the air is locked into the air bags. At least on a tight system. that means on a windy night you may feel motion, but not have to hear or have the aux air compresor work. Fix the leaks and you don't need to be monitoring the system for level or have a system on board that does.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
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    I called HWH today and talked to tech support. I told them the system worked great when the site was not level and not so great when site was level. They said the reason is that when the site is level the HWH automatic leveling sytem does not activate. Since it is not activated the auto-level is not working. I guess that is why it leans a little over time just like when it is in storage.

    I have a HWH Series 680 system, not sure how other HWH systems work.

    Terry

  6. #6
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    Terry,

    Take our advice and remarks with a grain of salt with respect to specifics on the air suspension system. The basics are somewhat the same for the Prevost level low system, but even then there are variations due to system changes over the years. What makes an internet analysis very difficult is modifications over and above what the Prevost system is, and to an extent to model year. There was a significant change to the logic on the Prevost level low system in the mid nineties and depending on how converters titled the coach, an early nineties shell can be treated by the owner's title as a later model. The best way for anyone to really know which system logic is employed is to look at the pneumatics based on the VIN number.

    But to add to that difficulty one almost needs to know how the converter modified the Prevost suspension system. If your HWH functions with the key off, but some from the same converter will not function with the key off that is important. My Liberty suspension system is different from the Prevost system and it will not function withg the key off, yet on my previous bus, the automatic leveling function did function with the key off.

    So the bottom line is while we can offer some basic information and advice, it has to be understood it can be wrong, or not complete.

    But just to restate something I already have previously stated, an automatic leveling feature that operates with the key off had better have a constant supply of at least 120 PSI or it is likely to be useless in practical terms because most front ends, and especially heavy ones need to see that pressure to be able to raise the front through the full range. I don't know what it takes to raise a rear left or right at weights near the gross weight limits, but I suspect it also requires more pressure than the average aux air compressor is set to put out. The real key to avoiding the leans is not to have the system capable of leveling the coach with the key off, but to eleminate the leaks that lead to the leans.

  7. #7
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    Thanks Jon,

    My bus is right up to max GVWR so I'm sure you are right about the need for at least 120 psi of air. I read as much as I could find on the HWH system and my basic take-away was similar to what you pointed out - many different models, many different ways to do the same thing means an almost infinite number of possibilities.

    I'm going to focus on the leaks and try to plug as many as I can find and see if that will get me mostly solved.

    Thanks for your help. Just when I think I understand some piece of this I realize I know almost nothing. That's part of what makes it fun.

    Terry

  8. #8
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    Terry,

    As you can imagine the coaches are complex. Problem solving, even for those professionally engaged in the business is made more difficult not only due to the number of Prevost design changes, but the wide variety of converters, and the number of design changes they also make over the years. As if that wasn't enough to frustrate almost anyone, there are the "upgrades" or owner requested changes over the years and the probability little of all of this is documented or easily accessed.

    Any of us can guess, but until we are at the coach and can actually identify what we are dealing with (and even then) we have nothing but our educated guesses.

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