tech.35058
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2016
- Messages
- 80
Todays project is to stop the hydraulic oil from transferring into the servo pump drive gear case, and improve any thing else we see along the way.
I tilted the cab, got the pumps out, cleaned up the hole, scraped 2 or 3 gallons of crud out of the floor under the pumps, wiped down some with solvent, spray painted the places where the paint was missing, looked at the hoses (EEEK!), cleaned up the pumps, and starting with the left pump(with the charge pump on it).
I got the drive gear off the shaft, removed snaprings, poked a hole in the (new style) seal, threaded a screw in it & removed seal with a slide hammer. inspected the shaft, no seal wear groove , cleaned out the seal bore cavity, all looks good, lubed shaft, lubed new seal lips & outer rim( with 30 wt motor oil, 1st cousin to specified hyd fluid), attempted to re -assemble. As expected, the rubber coated seal did _not_ want to go in the bore. (My first experience with this style seal was several years ago, working for some one else, so they got to pay for my educational experiences. I have damaged a few seals before getting here. ) I re-lubed the outer part of the seal with STP, found a big deepwell socket that would clear the shaft & apply even pressure around the seal,& carefully _forced _ the seal into the bore, re-installed the retaining snap ring & seated it in its groove with a small punch & hammer. This evened out the seal in the bore, as the snapring forced the seal a little deeper into its bore as I tapped the snapring into its groove. All of this was about what I expected.
On the right hand pump, I got to the part where I punched a hole in the seal to remove it, the old seal nrotatednin the bore as I tried to poke a hole into it. as I attempted to screw the slide hammmer screw int my hole, the seal popped out of the bore (_way _ too easy! )
So, I checked the parts list, seal is described as 2 inch O.D.
I mic'd my new rubber coated seal, ( how accurate is this going to be?) found it to be 2.0041 inch dia.
I used divider style calipers ( mic'd across the calipers) to measure the seal bore.
outside of the snap ring groove, the bore size is around 2.0105 to 2.0164. Like I said, how accurate is this?
inboard of the retaining ring groove, the seal bore appears to be 2.0005
So this appears to be about a 0.0035 or so interference fit. does this sound about right?
I also mic'd the old seals as best I could, the "normal" one (I know its distorted ) was 2.0015,
the other was 1.9974 x 2.0012, pretty distorted & mic'ing over the rubber coating.
The seal bore & the new seal sounds about right(?), but I had never measured these before, previously ( in my "professional engine tech" days ) I just put them in, no issues ever, after I started lubing them to get them in the seal carrier bore.
I do not want this leak to continue, do not want to have to pull all this back apart, so I am asking, has any one had this experience?
Is there anything I can do to "enhance" the seal housing to seal bore seal ?
I am considering a little "hydraulic sealant" on the bottom of the seal bore.
( I would say RTV would be a serious no-no here)
( the service manual specifies hydraulic sealnt on 37degree sealing faces of the hose fittings, so I should get some any way)
but maybe a tiny bead around the edge under the retaining snapring?
or maybe dribbling a tiny bit of something that would cause the rubber coating to swell around the outer edge?
( then wipe off the excess, but what stuff to use? super glue? (cyano-acrylic?)
Any one have experiences, trials or errors to share ?
Thanks, CE
I tilted the cab, got the pumps out, cleaned up the hole, scraped 2 or 3 gallons of crud out of the floor under the pumps, wiped down some with solvent, spray painted the places where the paint was missing, looked at the hoses (EEEK!), cleaned up the pumps, and starting with the left pump(with the charge pump on it).
I got the drive gear off the shaft, removed snaprings, poked a hole in the (new style) seal, threaded a screw in it & removed seal with a slide hammer. inspected the shaft, no seal wear groove , cleaned out the seal bore cavity, all looks good, lubed shaft, lubed new seal lips & outer rim( with 30 wt motor oil, 1st cousin to specified hyd fluid), attempted to re -assemble. As expected, the rubber coated seal did _not_ want to go in the bore. (My first experience with this style seal was several years ago, working for some one else, so they got to pay for my educational experiences. I have damaged a few seals before getting here. ) I re-lubed the outer part of the seal with STP, found a big deepwell socket that would clear the shaft & apply even pressure around the seal,& carefully _forced _ the seal into the bore, re-installed the retaining snap ring & seated it in its groove with a small punch & hammer. This evened out the seal in the bore, as the snapring forced the seal a little deeper into its bore as I tapped the snapring into its groove. All of this was about what I expected.
On the right hand pump, I got to the part where I punched a hole in the seal to remove it, the old seal nrotatednin the bore as I tried to poke a hole into it. as I attempted to screw the slide hammmer screw int my hole, the seal popped out of the bore (_way _ too easy! )
So, I checked the parts list, seal is described as 2 inch O.D.
I mic'd my new rubber coated seal, ( how accurate is this going to be?) found it to be 2.0041 inch dia.
I used divider style calipers ( mic'd across the calipers) to measure the seal bore.
outside of the snap ring groove, the bore size is around 2.0105 to 2.0164. Like I said, how accurate is this?
inboard of the retaining ring groove, the seal bore appears to be 2.0005
So this appears to be about a 0.0035 or so interference fit. does this sound about right?
I also mic'd the old seals as best I could, the "normal" one (I know its distorted ) was 2.0015,
the other was 1.9974 x 2.0012, pretty distorted & mic'ing over the rubber coating.
The seal bore & the new seal sounds about right(?), but I had never measured these before, previously ( in my "professional engine tech" days ) I just put them in, no issues ever, after I started lubing them to get them in the seal carrier bore.
I do not want this leak to continue, do not want to have to pull all this back apart, so I am asking, has any one had this experience?
Is there anything I can do to "enhance" the seal housing to seal bore seal ?
I am considering a little "hydraulic sealant" on the bottom of the seal bore.
( I would say RTV would be a serious no-no here)
( the service manual specifies hydraulic sealnt on 37degree sealing faces of the hose fittings, so I should get some any way)
but maybe a tiny bead around the edge under the retaining snapring?
or maybe dribbling a tiny bit of something that would cause the rubber coating to swell around the outer edge?
( then wipe off the excess, but what stuff to use? super glue? (cyano-acrylic?)
Any one have experiences, trials or errors to share ?
Thanks, CE