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Take a look inside the boots on your rear shocks. If you blew a seal there may be oil inside the boot. Normally if a shock leaks that much the oil comes out with the air. It may be the sudden jolt broke an airline or fitting so check those over visually. If nothing is obvious make up some bubble solution with a mixture of bar soap and water (works better than dish soap) and slop it on the fittings and shocks while applying air to the system. If you're losing air as fast as you say it shouldn't be hard to find were it went. The shocks can be repaired if it's just the seal(s). I'm also assuming that you actually have low air pressure not just a low air warning light. If the wire comes off the sensor back by the air valve you'll get a warning light.
Take a look inside the boots on your rear shocks. If you blew a seal there may be oil inside the boot. Normally if a shock leaks that much the oil comes out with the air. It may be the sudden jolt broke an airline or fitting so check those over visually. If nothing is obvious make up some bubble solution with a mixture of bar soap and water (works better than dish soap) and slop it on the fittings and shocks while applying air to the system. If you're losing air as fast as you say it shouldn't be hard to find were it went. The shocks can be repaired if it's just the seal(s). I'm also assuming that you actually have low air pressure not just a low air warning light. If the wire comes off the sensor back by the air valve you'll get a warning light.