Forum Discussion
- navegatorExplorerFind a place where they repair hydraulic jacks a heavy duty construction rental house should be able to give you that information, any hydrawlic repair shop can fix them.
navegator - doxiemom11Explorer IIDepends on how much leak, but we spent 1.5 years in the desert and ours started leaking quite a bit. Figured the dry climate may have dried out the seals, so we bought a bottle of Bar's Leaks Automatic Transmittion Repair - 2 part at Walmart, ( $8.88/red one side, yellow on other side of bottle) Put it in , and after using the jacks a few times, they stopped leaking and were holding in the position we set for level. It's now been 3 months and still working.
- MrWizardModeratorI recommend blue devil hydraulic leak stop
Blue devil
My right rear jack was leaking
I mixed equal parts blue devil and transmission fluid, used that to top off/fill up the reservoir
That was last December , no leaks. Holds pressure. Working great - kvh4636ExplorerTry spraying silicone spray on the cylinders. You may have to do this several times. All I can say is it worked on the jacks on my 1999 Pace Arrow.
- Bruce_BrownModeratorAny decent hydraulic shop can fix it. If it turns out not,to be a standard size seal (doubtful), any size seal can be made. At work we use Expresseal.com .
If you were closer I'd say stop over, I'll rebuild it for you. I just finished up one of my own cylinders. - SongbirdsExplorerWOW, what interesting fixes to HYDRAULIC LINES. Sometimes it's better to just bite the bullet an get them repaired correctly.
Understand, if you should do some crazy patch job and are in an accident and it is learned you did a patch JOB, your Insurance may no longer be so friendly. Moreover, if the patch job in any way contributed, to the accident. But whatever you do make sure you can live with the outcome, no matter how it goes down. Do the right thing you will sleep better. Songbirds wrote:
WOW, what interesting fixes to HYDRAULIC LINES. Sometimes it's better to just bite the bullet an get them repaired correctly.
Understand, if you should do some crazy patch job and are in an accident and it is learned you did a patch JOB, your Insurance may no longer be so friendly. Moreover, if the patch job in any way contributed, to the accident. But whatever you do make sure you can live with the outcome, no matter how it goes down. Do the right thing you will sleep better.
What does your post have to do with HYDRAULIC JACKS????? The OP has LEVELING jacks leaking, NOT lines. Doug- T18skyguyExplorerFWIW, I use 4x6 blocks, 2x4's, and 1 by stock to build a platform up as close to the jack as possible before I deploy them. I figure(maybe wrong) that it keeps wear on the motor and seals to a minimum. Sometimes my jacks only deploy an inch or two. I figure it can't hurt at least.
T18skyguy wrote:
FWIW, I use 4x6 blocks, 2x4's, and 1 by stock to build a platform up as close to the jack as possible before I deploy them. I figure(maybe wrong) that it keeps wear on the motor and seals to a minimum. Sometimes my jacks only deploy an inch or two. I figure it can't hurt at least.
jacks run at about 3000 PSI. making extension blocks changes nothing on the Hydraulics. What it does do, is give you more lift. Doug
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