Hydraulic Cylinder Seal Kits for Excavators: OEM-Quality Boom, Arm & Bucket Cylinder Seal Kits for Komatsu, CAT, Hitachi & More
A hydraulic cylinder seal kit is the most practical and cost-effective rebuild solution for boom, arm, and bucket cylinders within your excavator's hydraulic parts system, containing every rod seal, piston seal, wiper ring, buffer seal, and o-ring required to fully restore cylinder sealing performance without replacing the entire assembly. At Imara Engineering Supplies, we supply OEM-quality hydraulic cylinder seal kits manufactured to original elastomer specification and dimensional tolerance, cross-referenced to your exact cylinder bore, rod diameter, and machine model.
Our kits cover boom, arm, and bucket cylinders across all major brands. Imara Engineering holds high-demand cylinder seal kits in ready stock for fast dispatch internationally, ensuring your rebuild is never delayed by a lengthy overseas order. Our parts specialists confirm the exact correct kit for your cylinder bore, rod specification, and machine model before your order is placed, eliminating the risk of dimensional mismatches or incorrect seal grades on installation.
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Hydraulic Arm Cylinder Seal Repair Kit for Kato HD1430R Excavator
Arm Boom Bucket Cylinder Seal Kit 126-1937 for Caterpillar E120B 320 330 Excavator – Hydraulic Cylinder Repair Kit
Hydraulic Cylinder Seal Kit 991/00145 99100145 for JCB 3CX 4CX – Backhoe Loader
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Hydraulic Cylinder Seal Kits
What Does a Hydraulic Cylinder Seal Kit Contain?
A complete hydraulic seal kit supplies every sealing component required for a full cylinder rebuild in a single, dimensionally matched supply. A standard cylinder seal kit contains:
- Rod Seal — The primary dynamic seal that maintains hydraulic pressure within the cylinder while allowing the chrome rod to stroke in and out through its full range. The rod seal is the most frequently replaced component in any cylinder and the first point of visible external leakage when degradation begins.
- Wiper Seal — The outermost seal at the rod entry point, designed to scrape external contamination, dirt, dust, and abrasive particles from the rod surface on every inward stroke before it reaches the rod seal. A worn wiper seal allows contamination to reach and destroy the rod seal rapidly.
- Piston Seal — The seal mounted on the piston face that divides the cylinder barrel into two working chambers, preventing internal bypass between the cap end and rod end under working pressure. Worn piston seals cause cylinder drift and loss of holding force under load.
- Buffer Seal — A secondary seal positioned between the piston seal and rod seal that absorbs pressure spikes and shock loads, protecting the primary rod seal from peak pressure events during end-of-stroke impact and sudden load application.
- O-Ring Set — All o-rings at the rod gland, end cap, port connections, and piston assembly throughout the cylinder.
- Back-Up Rings — Anti-extrusion rings supporting o-rings at high-pressure interfaces, preventing seal extrusion under sustained working pressure on modern high-pressure excavator circuits.
Boom, Arm & Bucket Cylinder Seal Kits: Key Differences
While all three working cylinders use the same fundamental seal types, their seal kits are not interchangeable each is dimensionally specific to the bore diameter, rod diameter, and groove specifications of its respective cylinder:
- Boom Cylinder Seal Kits — Engineered for the largest bore and rod dimensions on the attachment, and for the sustained static load holding demands of the boom circuit. Boom cylinder seals experience the highest sustained pressure loads of all three cylinder positions, making seal material quality and pressure rating critical to service life. A boom cylinder seal kit must also include the gland and end cap o-rings for the larger-format sealing interfaces specific to boom cylinder dimensions.
- Arm Cylinder Seal Kits — Designed for the high-frequency dynamic cycling of the dipper arm — the most continuously active cylinder on the machine through the digging cycle. Arm cylinder seals experience more stroke cycles per working shift than any other cylinder seal position, making wiper seal condition and rod seal lip durability the most critical performance parameters for this kit. On high-hour machines, arm cylinder seal replacement is the most frequent cylinder seal maintenance event across the attachment.
- Bucket Cylinder Seal Kits — Specified for the smaller bore and rod dimensions of the bucket cylinder, with particular attention to wiper seal robustness, given the bucket cylinder's exposed operating position directly at the working face. The bucket cylinder wiper seal is the most vulnerable seal on the entire attachment to abrasive contamination from excavated material. A high-quality wiper seal is the single most important component in this kit for extending overall seal service life in abrasive operating environments.
- Always specify the cylinder position boom, arm, or bucket alongside your machine model and serial number when ordering to ensure the dimensionally correct kit is supplied.
Common Symptoms Requiring Cylinder Seal Kit Replacement
These are the key indicators that your excavator's cylinder seals require immediate attention:
- Visible rod seal oil leakage — Oil streaking or pooling at the rod end of any working cylinder is the most common and recognisable symptom of seal degradation address immediately before rod surface contamination accelerates the wear.
- Cylinder drift under load — Any working cylinder slowly moving in an unintended direction when the operator is not commanding movement indicates piston seal bypass — boom drifting down, arm creeping in, or bucket opening under load.
- Reduced function force or speed — Internal bypass past worn piston seals reduces effective working pressure in the active chamber, causing slower movement and reduced breakout force at the working face.
- Contamination on the rod surface — Dirt or abrasive material accumulating on the chrome rod surface indicates wiper seal failure — replace the full seal kit immediately before rod scoring destroys the sealing surface.
- Jerky or stuttering cylinder movement — Air ingestion through a compromised rod seal or contamination on the piston seal produces irregular movement visible as hesitation or stuttering during attachment operation.
Cylinder Seal Kit Models We Supply
Imara Engineering supplies hydraulic cylinder seal kits for a wide range of excavator models and cylinder positions. Our most commonly supplied kits include:
- Komatsu — PC200-7, PC200-8, PC210-8, PC300-7, PC300-8, PC360-7, PC400-7, PC400-8, PC450-8
- Caterpillar (CAT) — 320C, 320D, 320D2, 323, 325C, 325D, 330C, 330D, 336D, 336E
- Hitachi — ZX200-3, ZX210-3, ZX300-3, ZX330-3, ZX450-3, ZX500-3, EX200-5, EX300-5
- Volvo — EC210B, EC240B, EC290B, EC380, EC480, EC700
- Doosan — DX225LC, DX300LC, DX380LC, DX480LC
- Kobelco — SK200-8, SK300, SK350-8, SK480, SK850
- Hyundai — R210LC-9, R290LC-9, R380LC, R480LC
- Case — CX210, CX300, CX350, CX470
- Bobcat — E35, E50, E85 compact excavator range
Cannot find your cylinder model listed? Contact our parts team with your machine serial number, cylinder position, bore and rod diameter dimensions, and OEM part number, and we will confirm the correct seal kit immediately.
Cylinder Seal Kit Installation: Key Requirements for a Successful Rebuild
A successful cylinder seal rebuild depends as much on the installation process as on seal kit quality. These are the critical requirements:
- Inspect the rod surface before fitting new seals — The chrome rod surface must be smooth, undamaged, and free of scoring, pitting, or corrosion. A new seal fitted against a damaged rod will fail within hours. Address the rod surface condition before installing any seal kit.
- Inspect and hone the barrel bore if necessary — Light scoring or surface marks in the barrel bore will damage the new piston seal on every stroke. Minor bore marks can be addressed with a careful honing pass before seal installation.
- Clean all components thoroughly before assembly — Any contamination remaining in the barrel, gland, or piston assembly from the failed seals will attack new seal surfaces immediately — clean every component with fresh hydraulic fluid before assembly.
- Install seals with correct tooling — Rod seals and piston seals must be pressed squarely into their grooves without twisting or folding. Use the correct diameter installation sleeves and fitting tools to prevent installation damage.
- Lubricate all seals before assembly — Coat all seals lightly with clean hydraulic fluid or compatible assembly lubricant before installation to prevent dry-start damage during initial pressurisation.
- Bleed air from the cylinder after installation — Cycle the rebuilt cylinder slowly through its full stroke several times at low pressure before returning to full working load to purge any trapped air from the barrel and gland.
Related Hydraulic Parts You May Need
Cylinder seal kit rebuild frequently connects to wider attachment and hydraulic circuit servicing. Consider sourcing these components alongside your cylinder seal kits:
- Boom Cylinders — Where rod or barrel damage extends beyond seal replacement, a complete boom cylinder assembly is the correct solution
- Arm Cylinders — Complete arm cylinder assemblies where rod scoring or barrel damage prevents a successful seal kit rebuild
- Bucket Cylinders — Complete bucket cylinder assemblies where impact damage to the rod requires full assembly replacement
- Hydraulic Hoses & Pipes — Inspect and replace cylinder feed and return hoses at the same service event as cylinder seal rebuilds
- O-Ring Kits — Supplement cylinder seal kits with an o-ring assortment for all circuit connection seals disturbed during the cylinder rebuild
Frequently Asked Questions
Provide your machine model number, serial number, cylinder position boom, arm, or bucket, and where possible, the cylinder bore diameter, rod diameter, and OEM part number from your service manual. Our parts specialists at Imara Engineering cross-reference all dimensional specifications and confirm the exact correct kit before your order is placed.
No, each cylinder position uses different bore diameters, rod diameters, and groove dimensions, requiring a dimensionally specific seal kit. Using an incorrectly sized kit results in immediate seal failure from dimensional mismatch. Always order a dedicated kit for each cylinder position.
Run your fingernail lightly along the rod surface. Any scoring, pitting, or roughness you can feel will destroy a new rod seal rapidly. Visually inspect for corrosion, impact marks, and chrome delamination. If the surface is smooth and undamaged, a seal kit rebuild is appropriate. If you find scoring or pitting, the rod requires rechroming, or the cylinder requires complete replacement, before a seal kit will hold.
On a well-maintained machine with clean hydraulic fluid, cylinder seals typically require replacement every 3,000 to 5,000 operating hours, depending on duty cycle intensity and operating environment. Machines working in abrasive conditions, with contaminated fluid, or at high cycle frequency should have cylinder rod and wiper seals inspected more frequently and replaced proactively before visible leakage develops.
Yes, long-reach and high-reach demolition cylinder configurations use different bore and stroke specifications, requiring dimensionally specific seal kits. Always specify your attachment configuration alongside your machine model and serial number when ordering to ensure the correct kit is confirmed for your specific cylinder dimensions.

