He will be disconnecting exactly one and only hose and he should do all he can to make sure the hose remains as full of oil as possible. Getting some air in the circuit is almost inevitable but you can keep it to a minimum. Lift the hose up and pour oil in till it overflows before capping. Now when the boom is released its going to sag slightly as the trapped air is compressed. Thats the base point for measuring sag. Measure pin to pin. Wait 15 minutes and measure again. Subtract the two and you get rod extension. Compute the volume of oil lost from the rod end and divide by test time and you have leakage rate. Compare that to " normal" which for a bare cylinder should be damn near zero.
Dan
No way to test capped hose yet, but here are results from static sag test.
With cylinder extension at 2-3/8" (boom partially down), and waiting 15 min., sag went to 3-1/8", or 3/4" total sag.
With cylinder full retract (full up boom),, and waiting 15 min. sag was 1/2".
In both cases the 112 lb. root ripper was attached.
Seems like while traveling/bouncing, the sag might have been somewhat more.
Should I assume now that this may be quasi normal performance ????