Leaking Lift Cylinder

   / Leaking Lift Cylinder #1  

610l932

New member
Joined
Sep 27, 2023
Messages
1
Tractor
john deere 2210
I HAVE a 210 LOADER THE BUCKET CYLINDER SEALS R LEAKING .i HAVE THE SEAL KITS .ON THIS MODEL loader .The tractor is jd2210 IM NOT SURE IF THE ROD IS TO COME STRAIGHT OUT of the cylinder OR I HAVE TO DRIVE IT IN TO GET THE STOP RING OUT FIRST NOT SURE OF THE NAME OF THAT RING ?
 
   / Leaking Lift Cylinder #2  
Those cylinders are a true joy to work on. For some unknown reason (unknown to me at least) Mother Deere engineers decided to use a wire ring retainer to hold the gland unit in place, but they decided on a different twist. Instead of just installing it in a groove on the inside of the barrel like most other manufacturers of cylinders do, they put it into another groove on the gland itself. To get the gland, rod, and piston out of the barrel, one must insert a plastic "special tool" into the barrel groove once the gland has been pushed into the barrel deep enough to expose said groove. This "tool" fills the groove so the wire ring can't fall back into it and allows the gland to come out of the barrel. Sometimes.

I've had mixed results with the system, sometimes it works, sometimes not so much. I have a couple of those cylinders in my scrap pile that I was unsuccessful at getting apart after numerous attempts (and a number of plastic tools destroyed). Then a couple weeks ago I did the bucket cylinders on a skidloader. Those came apart correctly. It was no fun, required some effort, granted, but the tools worked and I was able to get them apart.
 
   / Leaking Lift Cylinder #3  
Those cylinders are a true joy to work on. For some unknown reason (unknown to me at least) Mother Deere engineers decided to use a wire ring retainer to hold the gland unit in place, but they decided on a different twist. Instead of just installing it in a groove on the inside of the barrel like most other manufacturers of cylinders do, they put it into another groove on the gland itself. To get the gland, rod, and piston out of the barrel, one must insert a plastic "special tool" into the barrel groove once the gland has been pushed into the barrel deep enough to expose said groove. This "tool" fills the groove so the wire ring can't fall back into it and allows the gland to come out of the barrel. Sometimes.

I've had mixed results with the system, sometimes it works, sometimes not so much. I have a couple of those cylinders in my scrap pile that I was unsuccessful at getting apart after numerous attempts (and a number of plastic tools destroyed). Then a couple weeks ago I did the bucket cylinders on a skidloader. Those came apart correctly. It was no fun, required some effort, granted, but the tools worked and I was able to get them apart.
Doesn’t the orange, plastic tool, a ring that fills that groove, come in the seal kit from Deere?

And indeed, a fun time getting the glad out!
 

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