bucket drops

   / bucket drops #21  
That is the most it will resist. Once it moves (if at all), unless it sucks more air in from somewhere, the resistance increases as vacuum increases on the cap end of the cylinder.

What is your position on retracting
Same as yours. Pressure has no limit. ... Vacuum does.
 
   / bucket drops #23  
   / bucket drops #24  
If there is a seal leak,with a pulling load, the fluid will transfer until the pressure equalizes.

As you stated, the load could pull a vacuum.
 
   / bucket drops #25  
If there is a seal leak,with a pulling load, the fluid will transfer until the pressure equalizes.

As you stated, the load could pull a vacuum.

Yes it can, but would reach equilibrium, and not continue to drift at the same rate.

But you are avoiding my questioning of the loader itself drifting down. Compressing a cylinder??
 
   / bucket drops #26  
Well, answer this, do you think all loader arms descending over night is caused by valves?

Are you saying that it could not be caused by the cyl seals?
 
   / bucket drops #27  
I am saying yes, it ain't the loader seals.

It can be the valve, gland seal leak, hose leak, but not the piston seals.
 
   / bucket drops #28  
If there is a seal leak,with a pulling load, the fluid will transfer until the pressure equalizes.

As you stated, the load could pull a vacuum.
As soon as the port blocked cyl extends its volume increases. Since it is full a hard vacuum immediately develops on both sides of the leaky piston. Neglecting seal friction, the force then remains constant at 14.7psi X rod area as the cyl continues to its stop. This leaves an empty void in the cyl. The oil and any included water -- EVERYTHING VOLATILE -- boils into the void at ambient temperature raising the pressure slightly above 0 Absolute.
larry
 
   / bucket drops #29  
As soon as the port blocked cyl extends its volume increases. Since it is full a hard vacuum immediately develops on both sides of the leaky piston. Neglecting seal friction, the force then remains constant at 14.7psi X rod area as the cyl continues to its stop. This leaves an empty void in the cyl. The oil and any included water -- EVERYTHING VOLATILE -- boils into the void at ambient temperature raising the pressure slightly above 0 Absolute.
larry
Sometimes the glands aren't very good at holding a vacuum though, and air is sucked in around the rod, and the whole process repeats. A situation that I've observed countless times on industrial press brakes.
 
   / bucket drops #30  
Yeah, but then it just extends easier since the cyl holds a less complete vacuum.
 

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