oldestguy
Geotechnical
- Jun 6, 2006
- 5,183
I have a friend in Sweden with who I communicate via Skype. He describes his boat hydraulic steering using copper pipes and some rubber hoses. Operations are jerky, with no movement of the steering cylinder followed by a jerk. Seems like air on the pressure side then. He maybe gets one drop of oil leak a week, yet apparently on the suction side of his steering wheel "pump", in one direction, could he be sucking in air? Is there the possibility that the viscosity or molecule size of the oil is such that it does not leak out much oil under pressure, but air can get in, under the suction condition?
Rudder is not stuck and moves freely when not h hooked to the steering cylinder.
The tests he has done certainly appear to show air in the system. Bleeding has not been done, but lowering the steering piston seems to solve his problem (letting air get to a reservoir).
I suggested locking the steering cylinder and seeing if he can expel anything via the pressure lines, looking for a leak.
thoughts or suggestions?
Rudder is not stuck and moves freely when not h hooked to the steering cylinder.
The tests he has done certainly appear to show air in the system. Bleeding has not been done, but lowering the steering piston seems to solve his problem (letting air get to a reservoir).
I suggested locking the steering cylinder and seeing if he can expel anything via the pressure lines, looking for a leak.
thoughts or suggestions?