Fluid Power World

  • Home
  • Technologies
    • Hydraulics
      • Cylinders & Actuators
      • Filtration/Contamination Control
      • Fittings, Couplings & Adapters
      • Fluids
      • Fluid Conditioning
      • Hose & Tubing
      • Pumps & Motors
      • Related Technologies
      • Sealing
      • Sensors & Gauges
      • Valves & Manifolds
    • Pneumatics
      • Air Preparation & Regulation
      • Compressed Air Technologies
      • Cylinders & Actuators
      • End Effectors & Grippers
      • Fittings, Couplings & Adapters
      • Hose & Tubing
      • Sensors
      • Vacuum
      • Valves & Manifolds
  • Engineering Basics
  • Trending
  • Resources
    • Digital Issues
    • Pneumatics Tech Toolbox
    • Podcasts
    • Subscribe to Fluid Power World Print Magazine
    • Videos
    • Webinars / Digital Events
    • White Papers
  • Women in Engineering
    • Women in Fluid Power
    • Women in Engineering
  • Design Guide Library
  • Classrooms
    • Pneumatics Classroom
  • SUBSCRIBE

Why do cylinders fail on an excavator?

By Fluid Power World Editor | November 29, 2016

Share
hitachi_zx_470_lc_excavator mining hydraulics

Hitachi ZX 470 LC excavator

Hydraulics works well in extreme conditions, including in mobile equipment such as excavators. Hydraulic systems run at higher pressures here, typically 4,000 psi or more. The components used, including the cylinders, are very heavy duty in nature, and they have high duty cycles—which means these machines can run for hours at a time—continuously. And, it goes without say, they take a lot of abuse.

As such, the cylinders used on excavators have to be very robust. A machine like this can cost $400,000—and if used in construction of multi-million dollar projects, you can’t have a lot of down time if you want to be productive. They generally use modular welded slash mill pipe cylinders and typically, they’re custom made for the application.

When you put weight on a cylinder in a side-load fashion, where there’s not any force vector linear with the cylinder itself but actually to the side of it, problems can occur. The piston rod wants to cock inside the cylinder, to come in or out at an angle. What that does is create wear inside the cylinder on the piston and the barrel, as well as the bearing and the gland on the head itself.

excavator1If you were to try to cycle a cylinder back and forth with a side-load on it, it would start to wear on opposite sides of the barrel and piston as well as start to wear the bearing and the gland. Seals would wear, there would be scoring and scratching inside the barrel, and slowly the cylinder would lose effectiveness, if not result in catastrophic failure of the rod itself.

From a sealing perspective, with the high force loads and the type of movements that excavators can go through, typically they’re made for digging—but if you’ve ever seen say an excavator doing demolition, they can push, pull, and move things sideways. Some excavators can even crawl up into a dump truck all by themselves. They can often be abused and used in many ways that they were not originally intended, and it’s often the hydraulic system and the cylinders that pay the price.

Mobile Hydraulic Tips


Filed Under: Cylinders & Actuators, Mobile Hydraulic Tips, Slider

 

Current Digital Issue

  Easier access to more of our content Every other month, readers of Fluid Power World have access to our beautiful print and digital editions, where we share a selection of the best fundamentals content, technology news, case studies, and technical articles that cover the gamut of hydraulics and pneumatics system design. But we only…

Subscribe!

Fluid Power World is written by engineers for engineers engaged in designing machines and or equipment in Off-Highway, Oil & Gas, Mining, Packaging, Industrial Applications, Agriculture, Construction, Forestry, Medical and Material Handling. Fluid Power World covers pneumatics, mobile hydraulics and industrial hydraulics.

Fluid Power Design Guides

fluid
“fpw
EXPAND YOUR KNOWLEDGE AND STAY CONNECTED
Get the latest info on technologies, tools and strategies for Fluid Power Professionals.

RSS Featured White Papers

  • Moving fluid power forward
  • High-force linear motion: How to convert from hydraulic cylinders to electric actuators and why.
  • A technical comparison: Performance of pneumatic cylinders and electric rod actuators
Fluid Power World
  • Hose Assembly Tips
  • Mobile Hydraulic Tips
  • Pneumatic Tips
  • Sealing & Contamination Control Tips
  • About us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2024 WTWH Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of WTWH Media
Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us

Search Fluid Power World

  • Home
  • Technologies
    • Hydraulics
      • Cylinders & Actuators
      • Filtration/Contamination Control
      • Fittings, Couplings & Adapters
      • Fluids
      • Fluid Conditioning
      • Hose & Tubing
      • Pumps & Motors
      • Related Technologies
      • Sealing
      • Sensors & Gauges
      • Valves & Manifolds
    • Pneumatics
      • Air Preparation & Regulation
      • Compressed Air Technologies
      • Cylinders & Actuators
      • End Effectors & Grippers
      • Fittings, Couplings & Adapters
      • Hose & Tubing
      • Sensors
      • Vacuum
      • Valves & Manifolds
  • Engineering Basics
  • Trending
  • Resources
    • Digital Issues
    • Pneumatics Tech Toolbox
    • Podcasts
    • Subscribe to Fluid Power World Print Magazine
    • Videos
    • Webinars / Digital Events
    • White Papers
  • Women in Engineering
    • Women in Fluid Power
    • Women in Engineering
  • Design Guide Library
  • Classrooms
    • Pneumatics Classroom
  • SUBSCRIBE