SHAANXI DZ14251440060 AIR STRUT
Product Specifications
| SHAANXI | DZ14251440060 |
The AIR STRUT is an integrated assembly that combines a pneumatic air spring sleeve and a hydraulic shock absorber damper into a single structural unit — replacing the conventional separate coil spring and strut of a MacPherson suspension with a combined component that provides both springing and damping functions while simultaneously allowing the suspension control module to vary the vehicle ride height at each corner by adjusting the nitrogen charge pressure in the air sleeve. The assembly consists of a hydraulic monotube or twin-tube damper whose body forms the lower structural element of the strut, a multi-ply reinforced rubber air sleeve bonded or clamped between an upper mounting piston attached to the damper body and a lower rolling piston that articulates as the damper compresses and extends, a top mount bearing assembly that allows the strut to rotate during steering inputs, and an air fitting port connected to the onboard compressor and valve block circuit. The air sleeve pressure — typically 4–10 bar at standard ride height — supports the vehicle corner weight and is continuously adjusted by the suspension control module in response to ride height sensor feedback, maintaining constant ride height across the full range of passenger and luggage load while simultaneously enabling the driver-selected ride height modes available on luxury and SUV platforms.
This unit — SHAANXI DZ14251440060 — is manufactured to OEM-equivalent specifications: damper stroke length and valving characteristics, air sleeve ply count and rubber compound grade, upper mount bearing load rating and rotation torque, air fitting port size and thread, overall compressed and extended length, and suspension turret mounting bolt pattern are matched to the original part. Supplied as a complete ready-to-install assembly. Available wholesale from 23.89 USD, MOQ 1 pcs, production lead time 45-50 days.
Air struts fail through the same two mechanisms that affect their separate components: air sleeve rubber fatigue cracking at the bead crimp zone and UV surface degradation causing slow nitrogen leaks, and hydraulic damper oil seal wear causing damper fluid loss that results in loss of damping control. A leaking air sleeve forces the compressor to cycle constantly, overheating it and causing secondary compressor failure if the sleeve fault is not diagnosed and repaired promptly. A damper that has lost its oil produces a characteristically soft, bouncy ride with excessive body roll on one corner — a symptom that is frequently misdiagnosed as an air spring pressure issue before the damper oil loss is identified on inspection.
- Use a scan tool to exhaust the air sleeve completely and command the suspension to its lowest position before raising the vehicle — most suspension control modules have a workshop or service mode that deflates all corners to atmospheric pressure; never attempt to remove an air strut with residual pressure in the sleeve as sudden decompression under vehicle weight causes serious injury; disconnect the battery after deflating to prevent the module from re-inflating during the repair.
- Support the lower control arm on a workshop jack set just below its unloaded position before disconnecting the strut from the knuckle — the control arm will drop its full suspension travel when the strut is disconnected, over-extending the driveshaft CV joint and stretching the brake hose and ABS sensor wire beyond their travel limit; the jack prevents this by maintaining the arm at a controlled height throughout the removal.
- Disconnect the air line from the strut fitting before loosening any mounting bolt — press the collet release collar on the push-fit fitting and withdraw the line; cap the disconnected line immediately with a blanking plug to prevent moisture ingress into the air circuit; moisture in the air lines corrodes the compressor reed valves and valve block solenoids, causing expensive secondary failures independent of the strut repair.
- Note the rotational orientation of the top mount relative to the suspension turret before removing the strut — photograph the alignment of the top mount indexing tab or flat with the turret recess; the new strut must be installed in the same rotational position to ensure the air line fitting and electrical connector (on adaptive damper units) align correctly with their routing paths without tension or kinking.
- Torque the lower strut-to-knuckle pinch bolts with the suspension at ride height, not with the suspension hanging — tightening these bolts with the suspension unloaded pre-stresses the rubber bushings in their rotated position; when the vehicle is lowered to ride height the bushings are further twisted beyond their design range, producing premature bushing failure and a persistent suspension creak within a short period of road use.
- Install the new AIR STRUT (SHAANXI DZ14251440060), reconnect the air line and any electrical connectors, reconnect the battery, use the scan tool to inflate the corner to standard ride height, apply soapy water to all air fittings and the sleeve surface to confirm no leaks, lower the vehicle, perform a ride height calibration via scan tool, and have a four-wheel alignment completed immediately — air strut replacement affects camber and requires alignment verification before road use.
| Part | Reason for Combined Replacement |
|---|---|
| Air Suspension Compressor OEM ref. varies by system | A leaking air strut sleeve that caused the compressor to run continuously beyond its duty cycle will have accumulated heat damage in the motor winding and valve assembly. If the compressor has been running abnormally for weeks before the strut fault was diagnosed — indicated by excessive compressor run-time events in the fault code history — inspect the compressor for reduced output pressure or abnormal current draw and replace it simultaneously with the strut if overheating damage is confirmed. |
| Ride Height Sensor and Linkage Rod OEM ref. varies by corner position | The ride height sensor and its linkage rod at the affected corner are fully accessible during strut removal and should be inspected for worn linkage ball joints and sensor output linearity. A sensor with worn ball joints introduces position hysteresis that the suspension module interprets as continuous height deviation, causing the compressor to hunt and overwork even with a new correctly functioning strut installed. Replace worn linkage components simultaneously with the strut. |
| Air Line and Push-Fit Fittings Nylon tubing, application-specific routing | The nylon air supply line between the valve block and the strut fitting runs along the chassis and suspension components where it is subject to chafing, UV degradation, and fitting corrosion. A hairline crack in the air line produces the same slow leak symptom as a failed sleeve and will cause the same compressor overload. Inspect the full line routing during strut replacement — a line showing surface cracking or a fitting with corrosion at the collet should be replaced simultaneously to prevent an immediate return of the compressor overrun fault. |