I know these are classic questions, but the instructions and advice I found still keep me puzzled.
I changed the oil in my floor jack, because the old oil had become black and watery. I did not understand from bleeding instructions that the cylinder must not be full. That means, of course, there is always air in the cylinder, unlike how other hydraulic systems like a car's brake fluid typically have no air (I guess that may not be entirely right---brake fluid tank does have a level indicator and obviously there is air above that).
So I definitely overfilled my jack and seem to have blown the seal on the release valve, because oil is leaking out when I open the release valve and I keep getting air pressure building up inside the jack when using. Otherwise, it seems to be working surprisingly and never experienced hydraulic lock. It also held the car up at full height for one hour fine.
This leads to several questions:
1) O-rings are the "seal" we're primarily talking about, especially when it comes to the relief valve? I don't see any other type of seal on the release valve screw when I take it out.
2) If hold the position the jack up vertically, does the fill hole usually serve as a max level fluid indicator like it does on many bottle jacks that stand in that same orientation?
3) For bleeding, can I instead simply remove the release valve while the jack is vertically upside down (i.e. release valve is at the top so fluid doesn't drain out) as an alternate method of releasing excess air inside the jack? This seems much easier than repeatedly removing the rubber cap.
4) Through the bleeding process by pumping while release valve is open and jack is on the ground normally (horizontally) with the fill plug removed, will the excess fluid also naturally come out during pumping?
5) When lowering the jack, I noticed a few times that the pumping lever would pop up when the jack reached the bottom, but would fall on its own once closing the release valve. Seemed really strange to me. Is that a sign of excess fluid or air still in the system or normal behavior? I never recalled happening before on any jack.
6) Is it true that bleeding should include squeezing the rubber plug for a moment to burp air when the lack is fully extended after overpumping it up? Seems like a way to add air into the system to me, exactly what I don't want.
7) How do I know when all the air is really out of the system? I keep seeing more air build up as I repeated the process, but I surmise the leaking seal on the release valve when it is open could also be allowing air to enter the system so it can never be finished bleeding?
8) The pump plunger seems to not be leaking and the jack is working despite the overfill, so I assume those seals and the ucup were not also damaged and I shouldn't bother checking them?
I might have forgotten some other questions, but I think that covers the most important stuff.
Thanks in advance for all your thoughts.
I changed the oil in my floor jack, because the old oil had become black and watery. I did not understand from bleeding instructions that the cylinder must not be full. That means, of course, there is always air in the cylinder, unlike how other hydraulic systems like a car's brake fluid typically have no air (I guess that may not be entirely right---brake fluid tank does have a level indicator and obviously there is air above that).
So I definitely overfilled my jack and seem to have blown the seal on the release valve, because oil is leaking out when I open the release valve and I keep getting air pressure building up inside the jack when using. Otherwise, it seems to be working surprisingly and never experienced hydraulic lock. It also held the car up at full height for one hour fine.
This leads to several questions:
1) O-rings are the "seal" we're primarily talking about, especially when it comes to the relief valve? I don't see any other type of seal on the release valve screw when I take it out.
2) If hold the position the jack up vertically, does the fill hole usually serve as a max level fluid indicator like it does on many bottle jacks that stand in that same orientation?
3) For bleeding, can I instead simply remove the release valve while the jack is vertically upside down (i.e. release valve is at the top so fluid doesn't drain out) as an alternate method of releasing excess air inside the jack? This seems much easier than repeatedly removing the rubber cap.
4) Through the bleeding process by pumping while release valve is open and jack is on the ground normally (horizontally) with the fill plug removed, will the excess fluid also naturally come out during pumping?
5) When lowering the jack, I noticed a few times that the pumping lever would pop up when the jack reached the bottom, but would fall on its own once closing the release valve. Seemed really strange to me. Is that a sign of excess fluid or air still in the system or normal behavior? I never recalled happening before on any jack.
6) Is it true that bleeding should include squeezing the rubber plug for a moment to burp air when the lack is fully extended after overpumping it up? Seems like a way to add air into the system to me, exactly what I don't want.
7) How do I know when all the air is really out of the system? I keep seeing more air build up as I repeated the process, but I surmise the leaking seal on the release valve when it is open could also be allowing air to enter the system so it can never be finished bleeding?
8) The pump plunger seems to not be leaking and the jack is working despite the overfill, so I assume those seals and the ucup were not also damaged and I shouldn't bother checking them?
I might have forgotten some other questions, but I think that covers the most important stuff.
Thanks in advance for all your thoughts.