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Gland wrenches - Case 580B

d2r

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Joined
Feb 21, 2011
Messages
64
Location
eastern ontario, canada
Does anyone have measured (maybe autocad?) drawings that would allow a novice to machine/ weld up some gland tools for the various 580B cylinders? You could really drop a bundle for the various cylinders @ 90 bucks a pop.

I scanned the stabiliser gland end (4" o.d.) for my 73... but I'm guessing there has to be a more precise measurement.

stab_glandsm.jpg

The previous owner used a chain-end vice grip on the cylinders and you can see where it really chewed up the outside edges of the gland itself.
 

Tinkerer

Senior Member
Joined
May 21, 2009
Messages
9,366
Location
The shore of the illinois river USA
I made a pattern by taking a scissors and cutting U opening out of a piece of aluminum foil.
I then laid it on the gland and carefully made shallow indentations in the foil for THREE of the pin holes. I used a hole punch to remove the indentations. I then laid the foil pattern on piece of 1/2 inch plate and transferred the marks to the plate.
After drilling the holes I laid the plate on the gland and inserted all the pins. With everything in place I welded the pins to the plate on the exposed side that was facing me. I made the pins from grade 8 bolts. The bolts were long enough that I could use the unthreaded section of the bolt. To finish up I used a oxy/acetylene cutting torch to carefully cut a square hole for my 3/4 inch breaker bar. It didn't take too long to make,it was cheap and works perfectly.

You may want to read this thread . The wrenches pictured are not mine but similar to mine.
https://www.heavyequipmentforums.com/showthread.php?4263-Hydraulic-cylinder-repair&
 
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d2r

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Joined
Feb 21, 2011
Messages
64
Location
eastern ontario, canada
"I made a pattern..."

got to thinking about this after seeing a home-made wrench on another hef post. it seemed way more robust than the factory tool... and even then, the guy bent it with his 8' cheater bar.

gland wrench.jpg

alrman... hadn't thought about an adjustable gland wrench. how do they stand up?
 

ScottAR

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 20, 2008
Messages
560
Location
NE Arkansas
I have the OTC 1266 wrench and it has held up fine for the two I've rebuilt so far. Six foot cheater with a 200ish lb me on it.

P.S. the $83 is a good price... just over jobber.
 
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TOM V

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 11, 2011
Messages
673
Location
CONNECTICUT
Occupation
Mechanic, Welder, Office work ect.
OTC face pin spanner 1/4" & 5/16" pins, 2" to 6" diameter. OTC #1266
 

Rally_Action

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2010
Messages
51
Location
Western Australia
I'm with Alrman. An adjustable spanner or pipe wrench works well.
Cost me $49AUD to buy a massive pipe wrench to do some cylinders on our JCB 3CX.
I also bought a 3/4" drive socket set to do the rod end nuts, however the largest socket wasn't big enough :Banghead so we used the pipe wrench on them too.
 

alrman

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Jun 20, 2009
Messages
3,308
Location
QLD Australia
Occupation
Diesel Fitter;Small Business Owner;Cleaner
alrman... hadn't thought about an adjustable gland wrench. how do they stand up?

d2r - I make a living out of repairing Case Equipment, I've used the same adjustable wrench for about 20yrs & you could say it gets used on a regular basis. Maybe broken 4 or 5 pins in that time, I always carry spares.

On a really stubborn gland I have a large piece of plate which I weld directly to the gland. Since I read of SUPERATCO's peinning method It's gathering dust under a bench. :notworthy
 

willie59

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Dec 21, 2008
Messages
13,388
Location
Knoxville TN
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Service Manager
On a really stubborn gland I have a large piece of plate which I weld directly to the gland. Since I read of SUPERATCO's peinning method It's gathering dust under a bench. :notworthy


LoL, works like a charm don't it bro. :)
 

DMiller

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Joined
Feb 21, 2010
Messages
16,557
Location
Hermann, Missouri
Occupation
Cheap "old" Geezer
Buddy just bought a 580CK E, someone used a punch on the gland nut holes so they will be a bear to remove, once out I will cut four new holes with a mill to replace them. Are on the pivot cylinders for the mast and are leaking.
 

alrman

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Jun 20, 2009
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QLD Australia
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Diesel Fitter;Small Business Owner;Cleaner
SuperAtco, worth his weight in gold.
:notworthy This pic needs a comeback! We need to celebrate the 9000 posts! :notworthy
:beerchug
 

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chase546

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Joined
Oct 22, 2013
Messages
53
Location
Dalton, GA
Thanks for the link. I will be trying that next trip out. Any secret tips on removing seized pins? lol 2 hours with a 40oz dead blow and it still wouldn't budge. Gotta love old equipment.
 

alrman

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Jun 20, 2009
Messages
3,308
Location
QLD Australia
Occupation
Diesel Fitter;Small Business Owner;Cleaner
Any secret tips on removing seized pins? lol 2 hours with a 40oz dead blow and it still wouldn't budge. Gotta love old equipment.
Bigger hammer, preferably made of steel. :D
 

mitch504

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2010
Messages
5,776
Location
Andrews SC
Yeah, 40 ozs isn't even a good start. I usually use a 12 pound hammer, when necessary a 20 lb (that's 320 ozs!). And I agree with alrman, no other hammer is as good as a steel sledge for this. I've used dead blow, brass, and a few other hammers, none deliver the shock of solid steel. And, if you use a rod or drift to drive the pin, use a steel one to start it moving. A brass drift is less likely to mushroom the pin, but it absorbs shock, too. Shock is good, if the pin is really seized.
 

Tinkerer

Senior Member
Joined
May 21, 2009
Messages
9,366
Location
The shore of the illinois river USA
And don't forget to wear safety glasses. I punctured my left eye cutting a cable with a wire rope cutter. A good friend of mine will spend the rest of his life with one eye blind. He was driving a track pin out a end-loader.
 
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