🧰 Case Study: Bushing Seal Failure in Clarke & Lewis CL-215 Tube Bender – Detection, Diagnosis, and Resolution
Overview
In April 2025, a fabrication site running a Clarke & Lewis CL-215 hydraulic tube bender reported inconsistent pressure build-up during the bend cycle. This issue led to operational slowdowns and unacceptable bend deformation. Upon a structured inspection, the root cause was isolated: a damaged bushing seal inside the bend cylinder.
This case study walks through the exact diagnostics, parts involved, replacement procedures, and long-term maintenance strategy for hydraulic integrity restoration — establishing topical authority around bend cylinder sealing system issues in mid-duty industrial tube benders.
1. 📌 Background on the Clarke & Lewis CL-215 Tube Bender
The CL-215 is a hydraulic rotary draw bender favored for:
- Production-grade precision
- Repeatability in mid-diameter bends (1.00″–3.00″)
- Robust mechanical components for steel and aluminum tubing
- Custom and standard radius tooling adaptability
It operates with high internal hydraulic pressure cycles that require reliable bend cylinder integrity for maintaining bend accuracy and repeat cycle tolerance.
2. 🛑 Detected Symptom: Pressure Drop & Inconsistent Bending Force
Operators observed:
- An audible hissing noise near the bend head
- Uneven wall thinning post-bend (critical in 2.00″ OD × 0.083” wall steel tubing)
- Slower pressure ramp-up on the hydraulic monitor
- Occasional hydraulic oil leak near the bend cylinder housing
“Why is my CL-215 bender losing pressure during the bend cycle?”
3. 🧪 Diagnostic & Root Cause Analysis
Upon inspection:
- Cylinder disassembly revealed a visibly worn bushing seal
- Microcracking and edge fraying observed at the seal lip
- Contamination (metal debris) and thermal degradation noted
- Piston scoring was minimal, indicating early-stage seal failure
- Bushing Seal (Hydraulic)
- Bend Cylinder (Pressure-retaining unit)
- VITON™ Seal Compound
- Clarke & Lewis OEM Seal Kit
- Hydraulic Maintenance Schedule (ISO 4413 Compliant)
4. 🧩 Solution – Replacement with OEM Bushing Seal
📸 Photos were taken on-site of the damaged seal and matching replacement from OEM kit #CL-BZK-215.
Steps Followed:
- Hydraulic system depressurized and fluid drained
- Bend cylinder extracted and disassembled
- Old bushing seal removed, housing cleaned using ISO-approved solvent
- OEM Clarke & Lewis bushing seal installed with light grease coating
- Cylinder reassembled, torqued to factory specs
- Hydraulic fluid replaced (ISO VG 46), bled, and tested
“Where to buy Clarke & Lewis CL-215 bend cylinder seal kit?”
5. 🔍 Outcome
- Bend force restored to normal operating range (validated via pressure gauge)
- No fluid leaks observed after 24-hour performance test
- Bend repeatability returned within 0.01″ tolerance
Industry Tip: Regular seal inspection every 250 hours of operation can prevent production halts. Use a seal health checklist as part of scheduled PM (Preventive Maintenance).
7. ❓FAQ
Q: How often should you replace the bushing seal in a CL-215 bender?
A: Every 1,500 cycles or 250–300 operational hours, depending on hydraulic fluid quality and environmental cleanliness.
Q: Can I use a non-OEM seal?
A: Technically yes, but it may void your warranty and introduce dimension variance. OEM seals ensure tolerance-fit and compatibility with your piston sleeve.
Q: How do I know my cylinder seal is failing?
A: Watch for pressure drops, fluid leaks, inconsistent bend angles, and unusual noise near the bend cylinder.
8. 📞 Order & Technical Support
Replacement parts, including the CL-215 bend cylinder bushing seal, are available through:
Ultimate Tube Bender Parts Plus Inc.
📧 Email: dave@benderparts.com
📍 Serving all 50 U.S. states with same-day shipping on stocked items.