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Hydraulic leak on room slideout

dsisemore1
Explorer
Explorer
I have an HWH Spacemaker room slideout. I noticed hydraulic oil had dripped on a chair that I had placed in the bay. I could see there was a very tiny bit of oil at the bottom of the cylinder where the rod extended. I cleaned it thoroughly and ran the slide in and out several times. There was no visible leak. I placed a wooden board under the cylinder and checked it several times over a 60 day period while we were using the coach during the summer. Did not notice any more oil. When we got home I put the coach in storage - Checked the coach after about a week and I could see a small amount of oil had dripped on the board. Once again it is a very tiny amount and I could feel the oil on the bottom of the cylinder. I tried to tighten the hose coming in but it was snug. Tried to post a picture but I cannot seem to figure out how on this page. My coach is a 2016 Tiffin 36LA.
Thanks
6 REPLIES 6

Bikeboy57
Explorer
Explorer
Use portions of paper towel zip tied to fittings and the cylinder end secured with zip ties to locate slow drips
Richard and Rhonda
1999 Newell
Subaru Outback toad

dougrainer
Nomad
Nomad
Remember, on a HWH slideout, there is CONSTANT pressure on the cylinders when retracted or extended. So, it is not unusual for a leak to take days or weeks to drip. NEVER overtighten the Hose flare fittings. Just snug is adequate. If you bear down on the nut, you will cause a leak at the swivel portion of the hose fitting. As you have done, clean the area and make sure it is dry. Then it should be easier to determine if you have a hose fitting leak or the interior seal of the slide cylinder is leaking. If I had a cylinder seal that leaks just a few drops, I would make a catch pan under that area to catch that few drops. Would not spend the money to fix unless the leak got worse. The HOSE end can be easily replaced with a swedge tool. Doug

dougrainer
Nomad
Nomad
MountainAir05 wrote:
You can also flush out the old oil and replace with new synthetic oil and wipe down the cylinder with that and cycle it in/out several times with fresh oil every time. Then wipe it down clean and see if it lube the seal, if not then as stated time for a rebuild.

I worked hydraulic cylinders for over 23 years and that always was the first choice on a minor leak to try , then the rebuild if it got worst.


ALWAYS determine the correct fluid for your systems. Doug


Only use one of the following synthetic fluids to replace the existing ATF in the system.
These fluids are compatible with Dexron ATF or HWH Specialty Hydraulic Oil.
Castrol Heavy Duty Lubricants - TranSynd
BP Lubricants - Autrand Syn 295
Cognis Corporation - Emgard 2805
International Truck and Engine Company - Fleetrite Synthetic ATF
Exxon Mobil Lubricants - Mobil Delvac Synthetic ATF
John Deere & Company - HD SynTran
Volvo Trucks North America - Bulldog Synthetic ATF

CA_Traveler
Explorer III
Explorer III
A leaking hose might also appear to be a cylinder leak so check carefully.
2009 Holiday Rambler 42' Scepter with ISL 400 Cummins
750 Watts Solar Morningstar MPPT 60 Controller
2014 Grand Cherokee Overland

Bob

MountainAir05
Explorer II
Explorer II
You can also flush out the old oil and replace with new synthetic oil and wipe down the cylinder with that and cycle it in/out several times with fresh oil every time. Then wipe it down clean and see if it lube the seal, if not then as stated time for a rebuild.

I worked hydraulic cylinders for over 23 years and that always was the first choice on a minor leak to try , then the rebuild if it got worst.

Flute_Man
Explorer
Explorer
If the oil is coming out from the rod seal you could remove the cylinder and have a hydraulic shop replace the seal.
Jerry Parr
05 Mandalay 40B
Cat C7 350
04 Honda CR-V
Ham Radio K7OU
Retired EE
Jrparr32@gmail.com
602-321-8141
Full-timer