Hose life and death
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11-14-2012, 05:04
Post: #1
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Hose life and death
Hi.
I wonder if we can discuss hoses? Hydraulic and air hoses. In the past year I've had three hose failures on my 1995 BMC-37 built on a MM series Spartan chassis. It's been kinda expensive to replace a total of seven hoses after four hoses had to be destroyed while getting access to the three failures that have become darn near permanent due to seizing. Mostly though, it has been highly inconvenient and irritating to pause long enough for the mechanical repair at random moments of travel. I pretty much understand the arithmetic of 2012 - 1995 years of service the hoses have given, and nothing lives forever. I am also resigned to "Suck it up..." as an approach to repair. But there is a common thread to these failures in my case: vibration, abrasion, and mounting hardware. All three hoses failed at a point where mounting brackets held the hose mid-way between start and end. None of the hoses appeared to have failed of old age and just punky. So the above situation leads me to think about a review of all the hoses and wires on the rig. I expect I might find numerous places where abrasion has begun but not reached failure yet. Perhaps further abrasion might be avoided by revising just how hoses are hung. I suspect there are "rules" about support like "No hose should be straight between two successive hangers" [a bend permits hose flex to relieve any pressure between vibrating hangers]. I wonder if the labor to prevent further failure is less than just fixing a broken hose after failure. This is where I hope others might chime in with personal experience. I have owned Bird for just over one year and like her a lot. But three hoses a year seems excessive to me. Is "hoses" a reasonable topic? Thanks everybody. Geo. |
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11-14-2012, 05:43
Post: #2
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Hose life and death
Geo,
I agree that vibration and chafing are two big enemies to hose life and longevity. So is age and heat. For example, the compressor coolant hoses run hot coolant from them and sit above the engine in a high heat area. I don't care if its 20 yrs old and only has 50K miles. Age beats mileage. I just replaced all hoses on a 1995 car with only 50K miles, due to age. They were all hard and starting to seep. Figured I'd catch it before I have an issue. I believe in the idea of x miles or y years, whatever comes first. I also had some hydraulic lines leak on my Bird due to rubbing against things they shouldn't have rubbed against. I made sure upon replacement to reinforce them with extra "covers" and check regularly to make sure nothing funny is going on. My motto is check frequently, replace on regular intervals and hopefully all will be well. I'd rather work at my time and leisure than side of the road problem. Markus 86 PT40 To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com From: verduin@... Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2012 12:04:01 -0500 Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Hose life and death
Hi.
I wonder if we can discuss hoses? Hydraulic and air hoses. In the past year I've had three hose failures on my 1995 BMC-37 built on a MM series Spartan chassis. It's been kinda expensive to replace a total of seven hoses after four hoses had to be destroyed while getting access to the three failures that have become darn near permanent due to seizing. Mostly though, it has been highly inconvenient and irritating to pause long enough for the mechanical repair at random moments of travel. I pretty much understand the arithmetic of 2012 - 1995 years of service the hoses have given, and nothing lives forever. I am also resigned to "Suck it up..." as an approach to repair. But there is a common thread to these failures in my case: vibration, abrasion, and mounting hardware. All three hoses failed at a point where mounting brackets held the hose mid-way between start and end. None of the hoses appeared to have failed of old age and just punky. So the above situation leads me to think about a review of all the hoses and wires on the rig. I expect I might find numerous places where abrasion has begun but not reached failure yet. Perhaps further abrasion might be avoided by revising just how hoses are hung. I suspect there are "rules" about support like "No hose should be straight between two successive hangers" [a bend permits hose flex to relieve any pressure between vibrating hangers]. I wonder if the labor to prevent further failure is less than just fixing a broken hose after failure. This is where I hope others might chime in with personal experience. I have owned Bird for just over one year and like her a lot. But three hoses a year seems excessive to me. Is "hoses" a reasonable topic? Thanks everybody. Geo. |
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11-14-2012, 10:50
Post: #3
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Hose life and death
George, anything in regards to fixing a coach is right on topic. I know when I bought out 88 last year, We replaced the air compressor, and brake line hoses. Its impossible to guess if the PO had abused the coach prior to your purchase. If you go back with the best hoses you can buy, then you should be good for quite a while. Ernie Ekberg 88 PT40 Wanderlodge Weatherford, Texas 817-475-3991 From: George F. VerDuin To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2012 11:04 AM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Hose life and death Hi.
I wonder if we can discuss hoses? Hydraulic and air hoses. In the past year I've had three hose failures on my 1995 BMC-37 built on a MM series Spartan chassis. It's been kinda expensive to replace a total of seven hoses after four hoses had to be destroyed while getting access to the three failures that have become darn near permanent due to seizing. Mostly though, it has been highly inconvenient and irritating to pause long enough for the mechanical repair at random moments of travel. I pretty much understand the arithmetic of 2012 - 1995 years of service the hoses have given, and nothing lives forever. I am also resigned to "Suck it up..." as an approach to repair. But there is a common thread to these failures in my case: vibration, abrasion, and mounting hardware. All three hoses failed at a point where mounting brackets held the hose mid-way between start and end. None of the hoses appeared to have failed of old age and just punky. So the above situation leads me to think about a review of all the hoses and wires on the rig. I expect I might find numerous places where abrasion has begun but not reached failure yet. Perhaps further abrasion might be avoided by revising just how hoses are hung. I suspect there are "rules" about support like "No hose should be straight between two successive hangers" [a bend permits hose flex to relieve any pressure between vibrating hangers]. I wonder if the labor to prevent further failure is less than just fixing a broken hose after failure. This is where I hope others might chime in with personal experience. I have owned Bird for just over one year and like her a lot. But three hoses a year seems excessive to me. Is "hoses" a reasonable topic? Thanks everybody. Geo. |
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