On pretty much anything else, that leak down then stop at a pressure like 25 psi might be
unlikely, but in this case, the bottom of the Air bags fold in/around a flattish 'puck' that's the baseplate bolted to the swing arm. This means that when there's enough pressure in there, the bag won't be in contact with the swing arm around where the bag is mounted, and the pressure can go
up whenever air gets added by the compressor during ryding, which'll extend the bag & raise the folded bit. But if the air bag's been run at low enough height/pressure that it's been in contact with the swing arm for long enough to wear any tiny holes in it cos it was sitting on top of any fine grit/gravel that'd been thrown up from the road, then the raising/extenting of the air bag will expose any potential leaks/holes that may've been caused by that fine grit/small gravel getting caught in between the air bag & the swing arm - and those tiny little holes (in
my first air bag failure, they were bloody near
microscopic holes, but there was a
whole bunch of 'em!

) will then slowly leak until the bag looses enough pressure that it once again collapses down & rolls the portion of bag with the leaks in it in & under/around the puck/baseplate, effectively sealing the leaks again by forcing them
reeeaaally tightly against the baseplate/puck until more air is added & exposes them again! :banghead: And there's other possibilities of similar 'higher pressure leak' scenario's too, especially with the 'push fit' air line connections & the 'release valve' itself.... I found a release valve just this last week that had it's air line connectors only screwed in finger tight, but they had some yellow goop on them (lockight?) that seemed to work OK as a sealer
at low pressure, only to leak like a seive at anything over about 30 psi!

Same result, similar problem, & a right pain to find.... the ACS worked OK when ryding, but leaked air pressure down to about 20psi once it was stopped & let sit for a day or two! :dontknow:
It wouldn't really be all that hard or expensive to design & deliver an ACS that worked properly, maybe BRP could even use a taller baseplate that's got a tapered raised piston that goes up inside the collapsing/low pressure bag just like all those that work so well & reliably for millions of miles on many heavy vehicles - just so that the bag itself only touches the almost vertical tapered sides of that piston & never actually contacts or puts any load &/or wear on the swing arm, where stuff can get caught on the almost horizontal surface between bag & arm, which is what causes the wear & creates these minute little holes.... But like I've said before, it's a great concept BRP have used here, just not so great an execution of that concept! :gaah: