Strouty
Well-known member
I am going to start a fire sale, or a fire, either way I need to get rid of lots of things.....
It's an Oliver 551. Basically an early 60s Oliver 550 tractor turned around backwards and a counterweight, frame and some mods tacked on. It was built by KD industries in Texas and shipped to Oliver to be sold as a factory built forklift in early 60's. I have 2 other Oliver tractors here, so a lot of the same parts, makes maintenance very easy.I think if the local one is very close to a bolt on, then I'd go for it. Pallet racks are not very useful if you have to load by hand. And old lifts with out the free lift is annoying and a bit dangerous if you aren't used to it as it is easy to forget about. Two of mine are and the big one is not and it gets way up there without the free lift. Doubt I am going to find a different mast for a 12k capacity for anything I can afford.
I can't quite tell what you have, is it a Ford?
We both do my friend.... that was the whole point of buying the forklift. Turbocharge my processing of **** to get rid of. My loader wasn't cutting it. Just too hard to process things.I am going to start a fire sale, or a fire, either way I need to get rid of lots of things.....
It is the triple telescoping cylinder. I wanted to do it myself, but in the interest of getting the job done sometime this year, i think i'm going to throw money at it to avoid the hassle. Guy i bought the lift from said a local place does them for 400 or less. Sounds like money well spent to me.I'm assuming you are putting the seal kit into the mast cylinder yourself? Is that the cylinder that telescopes out the top and the bottom? The primary outer cylinder moves up partway with the three stage mast?
About a year ago I did mine on the Clark. It wasn't too bad, but it was messy. Helps to have it under a beam with a chain hoist available.
I bought a couple of spanner wrenches and two good snap ring pliers of the appropriate size. That made a huge difference.
I popped the one gland nut loose before removing the cylinder from the mast.
One of the small seals I was able to get out without completely removing the one inner cylinder rod.
I also made a couple of seal drivers from 3" and 4" pvc pipe. That worked pretty good for the larger seals.
Good luck! Let me know if have questions.


Macgyver37, show your wife some videos of the flooding from Ida. Mention how dry she will be riding on the platform held up by the forks when the floods come to Kansas.I will now be watching for a dozer just in case..
i gotta go with firearms for that one.It is always good to be prepared, tell her it will be very useful once the zombie apocalypse hits.
Ok, so more like 600. I have a lathe. I can probably design and make any special tools. Where did you get your seals? You replaced everything right?yeah, if you get it done for $400, that is money well spent......
I think I paid about $38 for the seals, close to $80 or $100 for the tools..... I can't remember how much time it took me. Probably a few hours a day over a weeks time. At $400, my guess is that is about 3 to 5 hours of time.... longer than that and he's not making much money.