Should piston spin freely on shaft?

   / Should piston spin freely on shaft? #1  

Steave

Platinum Member
Joined
Mar 1, 2012
Messages
846
Location
Taylorsville, GA
Tractor
3000 Ford 66' 260A International Backhoe, Belarus 250AS
After the large nut on end of shaft has been tightened should the piston still be free to spin slightly?

The threads on the shaft are interference type threads and the nut will hold in place most anywhere
you quit tightening.

The pictures are not the best but you can see the machined shoulder on the shaft that holds the piston,
it appears the piston is made to be able to spin if it needs to inside the cylinder.

Should I allow it to slightly spin or tighten it tight.?

If it matters the cylinder is off my outrigger. International backhoe 1980 model.

I would appreciate any help.
 

Attachments

  • DSC_0023.JPG
    DSC_0023.JPG
    409.5 KB · Views: 260
  • DSC_0024.JPG
    DSC_0024.JPG
    317.5 KB · Views: 233
  • DSC_0025.JPG
    DSC_0025.JPG
    414.7 KB · Views: 209
  • DSC_0026.JPG
    DSC_0026.JPG
    401.3 KB · Views: 208
  • DSC_0027.JPG
    DSC_0027.JPG
    455.6 KB · Views: 241
   / Should piston spin freely on shaft? #2  
Everyone I worked on did not, some even have a small o ring between the shaft and piston. Wait a little while and maybe WDCHYD well see this, he does this kind of work everyday. The way I look at it, if it well spin it well leak past the shaft and piston.
 
   / Should piston spin freely on shaft?
  • Thread Starter
#3  
That's a good point about the leak. There's no seal or o ring there only metal to metal but a very close fit

Another cylinder (from the boom) I repaired last year was the same way. I thought about the piston spinning on that one also but tightened it down. Haven't had any trouble out of it. Thought I'd better try and find out for sure. Thanks.
 
   / Should piston spin freely on shaft? #4  
Why would you ever want a leak around the shaft and the piston. That nut is supposed to have Loctite red or blue on it and very tight.

The shaft and piston however, locked together, can turn in the cyl bore.
 
   / Should piston spin freely on shaft?
  • Thread Starter
#5  
I couldn't see any reason for the piston to be able to turn on the shaft either but the way it's machined it's like it was made to turn.

Thanks for the info. I used loctite red on the other cylinder so I'll do the same on this one. With this old machine I'll get plenty of experience at rebuilding cylinders and other things and may seek help again. I appreciate it.

The old backhoe is retired from production (sort of like me) and only used around the farm and sure does make life easier, when it's not in for repairs.:)
 
   / Should piston spin freely on shaft? #7  
I don't have much experience at all with actual cylinder rebuild. I did watch a forklift mechanic rebuild one the other day, and there was no particular reason the piston could not rotate relative to the shaft except for the fact it was too tight (the nut) for that to happen. And that particular cylinder had an O-ring on the shaft such that it sealed against the piston so that there could be no leaks around that joint.

The location of that particular O-ring was on the shaft itself such that once the piston is installed, the o-ring would be roughly in the center of the piston.

Listen to folks who know more...but I would expect that flow path to be sealed, and I'd try hard to understand whether the current setup does provide sealing. It could be something as simple as a washer under the nut combined with Locktite on the threads, etc. It should be quite easy to form a static seal.
 
   / Should piston spin freely on shaft?
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Did your cyl have an o-ring in front of the piston as it slides on the shaft?

Had this cyl been worked on before?




It didn't have an o-ring between the shaft and piston. It appears to be a very low tolerance machine fit metal to metal when nut is tight. The boom cylinder I repaired last year, while being larger, was built the same way and it didn't have an o-ring either.

I bought the machine used and don't know if its been repaired before but for the age of the machine it's very likely it has. I don't have any repair books and can't find any creditable info on the cylinder itself.
I tried to find rebuild kits but am not sure what to order. I get generic seals and o-rings from a hydraulic repair shop, they seem to think there is no o-ring needed there since there is no groove for it to rest in and would simply be smashed flat if placed in there.

I agree with you and everybody else here that there's no reason the piston should turn and I'll tighten it tight with loctite on the nut.
 
   / Should piston spin freely on shaft? #9  
A piston should not be able to rotate on the rod, any amount of movement there is a place to leak past. Some designs use an O-ring on the shaft, some have O-ring inside the piston, and some seal with machine surface only. Not sure about this, but it looks to me like that piston is on backwards. That recessed face & shoulder facing the nut looks like it would fit tight over the end of the rod to increase seal affect.
Self locking nuts are used to help keep nut form working loose, but do use Loctite and torque to normal specs. for the thread size of the rod if you don't have actual torque spec. for the cylinder.
 
   / Should piston spin freely on shaft? #10  
Quote:::they seem to think there is no o-ring needed there since there is no groove for it to rest in and would simply be smashed flat if placed in there.

They are right.. If piston face is flat as can be, No oring. If piston has little groove, then oring. Go for it!!!!
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

1989 Freightliner FLD120 (NEW CAT 3406A, NEW REAR ENDS, CLUTCH) (A51039)
1989 Freightliner...
Craftsman T1800 42in. Riding Mower (A49346)
Craftsman T1800...
UNUSED RAYTREE EXCAVATOR MULCHER (A50460)
UNUSED RAYTREE...
2015 Isuzu Sewer Jetter Truck (A49461)
2015 Isuzu Sewer...
2014 Dynapac CC4200 (A51039)
2014 Dynapac...
2007 MACK GRANITE ROLL OFF TRUCK (A51222)
2007 MACK GRANITE...
 
Top