Request a Quote

Request a quote

Spec in.
Steel out.

Upload your print or describe the cylinder. Engineering reviews every request and returns a firm price and lead time within one business day.

  1. 1Submit — drawing, STEP, DXF, or photos of the worn part.
  2. 2Review — bore, stroke, mounting, and materials confirmed with you.
  3. 3Quote — firm number and lead time, in writing.
Not sure of the spec yet?Get our free guide: How to Spec a Custom Hydraulic Cylinder →

RFQ — Custom cylinder

Firm price and lead time back within one business day.

  1. 1Your cylinder
  2. 2Drawings
  3. 3Contact
Step 1 of 3 — your cylinder

What do you need?

Key dimensions — all optional if you're attaching a drawing

Sets the force — bore² × pressure is your push. Wrong bore, wrong-sized cylinder.

How far the rod travels. Drives closed length and how much the rod wants to buckle.

The rod carries the load and fights buckling on the push. Too thin and a long stroke bows.

How it ties into the machine — clevis, cross-tube, flange, trunnion. Sets the geometry.

Thread or clevis at the working end. Has to match whatever it pins or threads into.

Oil, water-glycol, or air. Sets the seal compound — the wrong seal swells or weeps.

Working and peak PSI. Sizes the wall, the welds, and the rod. This is a safety number.

Cushions slow the piston at the ends of stroke. Skip them where you need them and it hammers itself.

Size, thread (SAE/NPT/BSPP), and location. Has to land where your hoses reach.

One-off rebuild or an annual run — it changes how we tool and price it.

Tell us what it's for. If you're attaching a print, a line about the machine is plenty.