radios1
Elite Member
you can have the pistons hard chromed, and they'll be better than new!. I said this before, maybe you missed it..
you can have the pistons hard chromed, and they'll be better than new!. I said this before, maybe you missed it..
YES, hard chroming DOES make the part larger, THAT is what it's for.. it gets ground to proper size and polished after the chroming!..I guess I don't understand the statement. Would hard chroming them in effect make them oversized to match the bores if they had to be honed or machined?
Where I am now, the local hydraulic rebuilder quoted me $90 to inspect and quote rebuilding. They can probably do it in a couple days, but said it would likely cost in excess of what a replacement would cost. I have a Eaton Distributor that thinks they can get me a 30922-DSC (which looks to me to be a direct replacement, based on specs and schematic) for $260 + shipping. Several quotes have stated a 5-week lead time, including this one, but after asking about it, he thinks he can ship it within 5 business days.
I think the replacement is the best bet, if I can get it shipped within 5 business days. The rebuild will cost more unless I do it myself, but doing it myself risks not correcting internal leaks.
I personally agree to replace it. If you even attempt to rebuild it, the cost to look at it is alone 1/3 of a replacement. Then comes trying to fix all of the problems.I guess I don't understand the statement. Would hard chroming them in effect make them oversized to match the bores if they had to be honed or machined?
Where I am now, the local hydraulic rebuilder quoted me $90 to inspect and quote rebuilding. They can probably do it in a couple days, but said it would likely cost in excess of what a replacement would cost. I have a Eaton Distributor that thinks they can get me a 30922-DSC (which looks to me to be a direct replacement, based on specs and schematic) for $260 + shipping. Several quotes have stated a 5-week lead time, including this one, but after asking about it, he thinks he can ship it within 5 business days.
I think the replacement is the best bet, if I can get it shipped within 5 business days. The rebuild will cost more unless I do it myself, but doing it myself risks not correcting internal leaks.
I personally agree to replace it. If you even attempt to rebuild it, the cost to look at it is alone 1/3 of a replacement. Then comes trying to fix all of the problems.
:thumbsup: What a great find and rewarding result. Best of luck tracking down the milky oil...