booshambo
Electrical
- Feb 18, 2015
- 31
Hello.
I'm working on a hydraulic system for light aircraft landing gear retraction/extension.
Everyone I know that operates similar systems says it is very rare (like essentially never) that they purge/bleed the thing.
(These are owner/operators, so maybe others are solving that problem for them.)
Hydraulic mechanics tell me similar things about larger construction hydraulics - you just cycle the things and the air ends up
in the tank, where it harmlessly bubbles away. (These sources are real maintainers and trustworthy in that context.)
My confusion is that since any volume in the cap end after retraction, as well as the volume of the line from the pump to the cap end, never
gets expelled to tank. How does that air get purged? Similar remarks regarding the rod end.
Thanks,
b
I'm working on a hydraulic system for light aircraft landing gear retraction/extension.
Everyone I know that operates similar systems says it is very rare (like essentially never) that they purge/bleed the thing.
(These are owner/operators, so maybe others are solving that problem for them.)
Hydraulic mechanics tell me similar things about larger construction hydraulics - you just cycle the things and the air ends up
in the tank, where it harmlessly bubbles away. (These sources are real maintainers and trustworthy in that context.)
My confusion is that since any volume in the cap end after retraction, as well as the volume of the line from the pump to the cap end, never
gets expelled to tank. How does that air get purged? Similar remarks regarding the rod end.
Thanks,
b