A brief overview of the air system-
Truck starts. Has no air. Begins building air.
Pressure rises. When it hits 70psi or so, the PPV opens and "nonessential" equipment gets air. This includes wipers, horn, tcase, and air governor.
At 120psi the expello valve on the air dryer sneezes, and air is sent from the governor to the unloader valve on top of the air compressor. Air pressure stops building.
The above is what happens when things are working normally.
If the PPV doesn't open (a very common problem) , then none of the nonessential equipment gets air, the governor never sees air, and the unloader valve on the air compressor never gets the signal to stop building air.
Pressure continues to rise. To prevent catastrophic overpressure failure, there's a pressure relief valve that pops at 150psi. It'll cycle every few seconds, and sounds something like a very angry air dryer expello valve.
To people with a background in commercial air brake systems, this seems like an air governor problem. It isn't. They replace a perfectly good governor, and the problem doesn't go away.
As mentioned above, the PPV can be cleaned and serviced and likely restored to service. Replacing is easier and faster and more certain, especially for someone who hasn't worked on this stuff before.
The root cause of almost all air related problems on these trucks is moisture in the system.