Functional testing of a cylinder sealing package in a controlled environment in Parker Hannifin’s Application Lab has shown that an aggressive wiper lip can actually cut the oil film and prevent it from re-entering the cylinder during the retract stroke. Over many cycles, this separated oil film builds up on the rod outside the wiper, forms into drops, and results in leakage. Table 1 shows rod leakage for a given rod sealing package, with and without an aggressive wiper. These results confirm that the wiper causes leakage in a relatively low number of strokes.
Wiper design optimization
When designing the rod wiper, achieving a balance between enough sealing force to prevent contamination ingression but not so much as to cut the hydrodynamic film is key to a high-performance, leak-free cylinder. Lip aggressiveness is a function of the total contact force exerted on the rod, the contact force gradient going in the retract direction, and the shape of the lip. Potential design modifications to reduce wiper lip aggressiveness include:
• a radius at the leading edge of the wiper lip,
• decreasing the wiper lip interference with the rod, and
• making the lip thinner (more flexible).