Churchill Hydrolastic pump

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spoon.450
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Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by spoon.450 »

I've just bought this from my local garage. Although the pressure gauge looks to be damaged I am told the pump works as it should. Can anyone please point me to an instruction manual, or give a brief description of how to use it :oops: .....what lever / knob does what etc ?
It is available for anyone to borrow if needed.
Thanks
Dave
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by 111Robin »

Yellow valve is on the right side

Image20170808_194208 by Robin Derrick, on Flickr
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spoon.450
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by spoon.450 »

Fantastic Robin.....thanks very much :D
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by 111Robin »

No problem. The vacuum side doesn't work on mine but it's fine for setting the heights. There was a rare Churchill pump overhaul kit on eBay recently but it went too far for me. I'll strip it down some day. At the minimum I'd need a new vacuum gauge but I don't think that would be all somehow.
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by Andrew1967 »

The vacuum side on ours doesn't work either but its not a problem at all.

We pump the suspension up and then let right back down again, which pretty much evacuates all the air. Then re-pressurise and set to height.
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by Bart Smith »

Looks like a baby Dalek to me.
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by Vulgalour »

People do tend to refer to them as Daleks, I picked one up a little while ago that unfortunately had all the seals fail after a couple of uses. The components are obsolete sizes and I've not yet found a supplier for replacement components. I've been considering modernising the internals so it's easier to service but keeping the same external appearance as they're a handy size and shape.

If you've got one and it works, look after it. They're quite prized things now. I only wish mine worked, especially since I have both a Hydralastic and a Hydragas car that would benefit from its services. There is someone local with a Liquid Levers pump but that has no vacuum function and it costs to get him to come to the car, which can get a bit expensive if you need multiple call outs.
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by winabbey »

Below are the instruction sheets that came with the BMC hydro pump.
Hydro Pump 18G 703 Instructions p1.jpg
Hydro Pump 18G 703 Instructions p2.jpg
Hydro Pump 18G 703 Instructions p3.jpg
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winabbey
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by winabbey »

BMC Australia published this Service Bulletin to assist Dealers in maintaining their pump. As already mentioned getting genuine NOS repair kits or individual parts is almost an impossibility so alternatives would need to be sourced. I'm not aware of an easy option for this.
ST41 p1.jpg
ST41 p2.jpg
ST41 p3.jpg
ST41 p4.jpg
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by 111Robin »

Very useful information thanks. I had dealings with many seal suppliers at work previously so might give them a call. I'm sure if I sent the seals to them they could find some current alternatives. Likely to be pricey though.
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by mk1 »

I bought a knackered hydro pump off ebay a few years ago, stripped it & decided I couldn't decide how to make it work, with the info above, I am now filled with hope (again).

Thanks folks.
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by nick@dunsdale »

The garage i worked in as a lad had a pump, but it wasnt like one i had seen before
My boss had worked for a Austin dealer in the 60's and had acquired it from there

I t looked just like a grease gun but was a hydro pump, he told me it was a portable one that was much handier to take to broken down vehicles, he still has it i will try to get a pic the next time i see him
The best repairs go un-noticed
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by minimk1man »

Thanks for that information Winabby. Extremely useful.
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rich@minispares.com
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by rich@minispares.com »

nick@dunsdale wrote:The garage i worked in as a lad had a pump, but it wasnt like one i had seen before
My boss had worked for a Austin dealer in the 60's and had acquired it from there

I t looked just like a grease gun but was a hydro pump, he told me it was a portable one that was much handier to take to broken down vehicles, he still has it i will try to get a pic the next time i see him
you can convert a normal grease gun if you put the right fitting on the end

they are pretty slow to use and it would be a pain to re-fill a full system, but they work ok for quick little adjustments.

a mate of mine used to have one and I used it a few times
should you wish, you can contact me on rich@minispares.com

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geroch
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by geroch »

I have the innocenti model pump..

Image

The vacuum pump works little, the pump has the pin irremediably damaged.
However, you can do the same to charge the units, take some time and a little liquid is lost.

The mechanism is the same:

Image20160302_141950

Image20160302_141944

Image20160302_144804

Image20160302_141939

Image20160302_141956
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rich@minispares.com
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by rich@minispares.com »

geroch wrote:I have the innocenti model pump..
it probably does cappuccinos as well! :lol:
should you wish, you can contact me on rich@minispares.com

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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by Vulgalour »

Winabbey: thanks for posting those, I hadn't been able to find large scale reference like that, it could make the search for parts a bit easier.

Geroch: Never seen an Innocenti one before. Typically it's ever so slightly better looking than the British version.
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by ChrisM »

Has anyone got a knackered one that would donate the gauges? I have a borrowed one that needs TLC. Again VAC doesn't work, but I can probably make the parts.

Cheers - Chris.
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Re: Churchill Hydrolastic pump

Post by IAIN »

Vulgalour wrote: If you've got one and it works, look after it. They're quite prized things now. I only wish mine worked, especially since I have both a Hydralastic and a Hydragas car that would benefit from its services. There is someone local with a Liquid Levers pump but that has no vacuum function and it costs to get him to come to the car, which can get a bit expensive if you need multiple call outs.
I have an early liquid levers pump. When it packed up I opened it to see what was wrong to find a cheap plastic bottle for a tank and a clutch slave cylinder for the pump.
There is no vacuum on this model but at least it's easy to fix. :roll:
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