Well, excuse me if I get touchy touchy, but there have been attempts to derail my train more than once by winds from the north. Garage Journal should not be like Youtube, where
anything someone says or does receives negative comments from the so called haters. I hope you don't turn into one of those haters and say negative things about everything I post.
You have been just lucky that all the hundreds of jacks that you have repaired had good seats so you had no problems seating the balls. But what is going to happen the day you get one with bad seats and anything you do does not fix the seats?
What is going to be your solution to this problem?
As I mentioned before, this is a last resort effort. Yes, the seat will be different for a ball of the original size if you wanted to go back. But, when it works,
why would you go back to a ball of the original size? Just put the plug back and use the jack. If the ball is seated
correctly, it should work as well as the original sized ball and it should last for whatever amount others seats last.
Persons pay to get their jacks working. They wants results. If the pump does not work with the original sized ball, for whatever reason, then resort to other methods of fixing it. Many jacks can not be fixed with original parts because, as you well know, there are no original parts to be found. Does that mean I have to tell the person that it is impossible to fix his jack because there are no original parts? I know of a local hydraulic repair shop that does that. They don't want to do anything to repair those jacks. Most imports jack that have been fixed in GJ have been repaired without original parts. I think this can be extended to other methods of fixing, within reason, of course.
Take for example the Snap On that still leaks; maintaining the same size ball has resulted in a
non working jack after a lot of effort. Had he taken the jack to be repaired "professionally" he may had gotten his jack back still leaking or returned as non-repairable, for many shops are not equipped to redo seats or they don't want to do it. So what other alternatives he has? Maybe buy a milling machine and bits to redo the seats? Too expensive and no guarantee of results. The only solution left is to try another method and if it works, great, if it does not, take the jack to the scrap yard or sell the parts.
If things were always done with the same parts and no one wanted to try other methods, race cars, for example, would not exist for no parts could be changed or modified. And we would still be riding steam trains for no one would have dare to change things and build diesel or electric trains. Be grateful you don't have to shovel coals into a boiler (or wherever) because someone else though of a different way to do things.