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Hydraulic oil.
There are two chambers an upper and a lower. If the chair is all the way down the fluid is in the upper chamber. When the barber selects the chair to go up the fluid from the top is forced through a metering valve to the lower chamber. As the lower chamber fills the chair moves up into the space that is vacated in the upper chamber.
Where ti sth sreial number on the paidar barber chair
Barber chairs are often raised and lowered using gas or hydraulic struts. These struts work by using strong springs or pressurized gas. Some of these devices can be recharged, or have replaceable seals, but others are disposable items that are replaced as a unit.
desk chair and air compresser
desk chair and air compresser
Use hydraulic jack oil, available pretty much anywhere - I used Johnson's, 1qt bottles are $7.99 at my local O'Reilly. To fill, or replace, the fluid you'll first remove the seat cushion. It should just lift off. Under that there will be a hole in the center of the base, it may or may not be covered by a plastic cap or a screw on older models. Remove the cap to access the fluid reservoir. I would suggest removing as much existing fluid as you can before adding more, to avoid overfilling the pump. You can find a suction gun at harbor freight for about $15 which you can use to remove as much of the fluid in the chair as possible, without having to disassemble the pump mechanism. Place your control lever in the full down position, this will allow clear access to feed in the suction tube, as well as assure the chair is fully "down" and thus the reservoir as full as possible. Once empty, refill with hydraulic jack oil. Add one quart to start, and pump the chair up. If it gurgles while raising and before topping out, or when lowering, lower and add another 2-4oz and repeat the process until it makes no liquid noises when being raised, and doesn't gurgle or gush when being lowered. If you add too much fluid, the seals may be damaged and/or the chair will be very difficult to lower after being raised. Also do not EVER use any oil/fluid which mentions "stop leak".
Use hydraulic jack oil, available pretty much anywhere - I used Johnson's, 1qt bottles are $7.99 at my local O'Reilly. To fill, or replace, the fluid you'll first remove the seat cushion. It should just lift off. Under that there will be a hole in the center of the base, it may or may not be covered by a plastic cap or a screw on older models. Remove the cap to access the fluid reservoir. I would suggest removing as much existing fluid as you can before adding more, to avoid overfilling the pump. You can find a suction gun at harbor freight for about $15 which you can use to remove as much of the fluid in the chair as possible, without having to disassemble the pump mechanism. Place your control lever in the full down position, this will allow clear access to feed in the suction tube, as well as assure the chair is fully "down" and thus the reservoir as full as possible. Once empty, refill with hydraulic jack oil. Add one quart to start, and pump the chair up. If it gurgles while raising and before topping out, or when lowering, lower and add another 2-4oz and repeat the process until it makes no liquid noises when being raised, and doesn't gurgle or gush when being lowered. If you add too much fluid, the seals may be damaged and/or the chair will be very difficult to lower after being raised. Also do not EVER use any oil/fluid which mentions "stop leak".
Use hydraulic jack oil, available pretty much anywhere - I used Johnson's, 1qt bottles are $7.99 at my local O'Reilly. To fill, or replace, the fluid you'll first remove the seat cushion. It should just lift off. Under that there will be a hole in the center of the base, it may or may not be covered by a plastic cap or a screw on older models. Remove the cap to access the fluid reservoir. I would suggest removing as much existing fluid as you can before adding more, to avoid overfilling the pump. You can find a suction gun at harbor freight for about $15 which you can use to remove as much of the fluid in the chair as possible, without having to disassemble the pump mechanism. Place your control lever in the full down position, this will allow clear access to feed in the suction tube, as well as assure the chair is fully "down" and thus the reservoir as full as possible. Once empty, refill with hydraulic jack oil. Add one quart to start, and pump the chair up. If it gurgles while raising and before topping out, or when lowering, lower and add another 2-4oz and repeat the process until it makes no liquid noises when being raised, and doesn't gurgle or gush when being lowered. If you add too much fluid, the seals may be damaged and/or the chair will be very difficult to lower after being raised. Also do not EVER use any oil/fluid which mentions "stop leak".
Check the hydraulic fluid. Hydraulic cylinder piston rubber washers to replace.
Bottle jaw in sheep and goats is soft fluid swelling under the jaw as a result of anaemia usually due to haemonchosis (Barber's Pole worm infestation) - the treatment for bottle jaw is drenching for worms.
they were made out of steel in 1885 They were all made with steel barrels. The earliest, by Lefever & Barber Co in 1874-75 were damascus or laminated steel. Fluid steel barrels would have been introduced about 1900.