I converted my suspension from air to hydraulic coil-overs, and removed the compressor. The "Service Suspension" msg appeared, and would not clear. I tried the usual pulling fuses, battery disconnect and other voodoo without success.
The fact is that this msg will appear if any sensors in the system are missing/defective. Removing the compressor will trigger codes....
To solve this, I unplugged, and removed the compressor, placing it on my bench. I did the following to create a plug-in solution:
1) Unplug the 3-wire pressure sensor from the compressor. Unscrew the pressure sensor, and plug it back into the harness.
2) Cut, and cap the 2 larger power wires leading to the compressor motor.
3) The two remaining wires go to the compressor exhaust valve. Cut those two wires, and remove the harness from the compressor.
Next solder a 25 watt, 3.9 ohm resistor between the two wires.
4) Weather-proof the harness as you wish, leaving the resistor exposed to dissipate heat. Plug the harness back in, and secure it away from wheel/road wash.
Clear codes, and you are done.
Note: This will solve the compressor-related codes, but if other suspension-related sensors are missing/damaged, you will still get the msg.
Most scan tools will read/clear the suspension codes. I recommend also recalibrating the level with a Tech 2, as most others can not access that feature.
This worked for me, and I have not had further "Service Suspension" msgs.
The fact is that this msg will appear if any sensors in the system are missing/defective. Removing the compressor will trigger codes....
To solve this, I unplugged, and removed the compressor, placing it on my bench. I did the following to create a plug-in solution:
1) Unplug the 3-wire pressure sensor from the compressor. Unscrew the pressure sensor, and plug it back into the harness.
2) Cut, and cap the 2 larger power wires leading to the compressor motor.
3) The two remaining wires go to the compressor exhaust valve. Cut those two wires, and remove the harness from the compressor.
Next solder a 25 watt, 3.9 ohm resistor between the two wires.
4) Weather-proof the harness as you wish, leaving the resistor exposed to dissipate heat. Plug the harness back in, and secure it away from wheel/road wash.
Clear codes, and you are done.
Note: This will solve the compressor-related codes, but if other suspension-related sensors are missing/damaged, you will still get the msg.
Most scan tools will read/clear the suspension codes. I recommend also recalibrating the level with a Tech 2, as most others can not access that feature.
This worked for me, and I have not had further "Service Suspension" msgs.