[AT] Hydraulic cylinder rebuild.
David Myers
Walking_Tractor at yahoo.com
Tue Feb 26 04:14:33 PST 2019
They use a hydraulic torque table/bench. It locks the eye end solid and uses a cylinder to pull the other end around. The nut is held in a clamping device turned by the cylinder. The torque will be from 600lbs up.
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> On Feb 25, 2019, at 12:19 PM, James Peck <jamesgpeck at hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> What tool does the person who rebuilds cylinders for a living use
>
> [Cecil Bearden] Yep! There is a guy in the Frozen North who runs Cats. I got the idea from one of his postings. Since I got AutoCAD, it is so easy to draw wrench patterns. I don't know about the torque, but when I tightened the nut, I bent a tempered steel round and square 6" pry bar my Grandfather had from the 1800's.
>
> [Richard Walker] I rebuilt the outside one 5 or 6 years ago. They are a 6 inch cylinder x 4 ft long with a 2.5 inch rod. Everything Metric. The last time I rebuilt one I made a wrench for the rod nut from an AutoCAD drawing and cut it with the plasma cutter then put it inside a 8 ft piece of Drill stem. I used a 2 inch dia. shaft to hold the rod end. Held the rod down with one loader and used another to push the wrench down.
>
> Grinning, because a dozen years ago I did something similar to disassemble a backhoe cylinder. Burned a wrench profile from 1/4" plate, welded on a long steel rod handle, parked my Dingo skid steer atop the cylinder's butt end, and used a small gear hoist to pull between the wrench handle and a 5' pipe tong to unscrew the end cap.
>
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