The NUT has indeed come off that cylinder rod, thus the piston is detached from the rod. The thing clanging around inside that cylinder is a washer and the nut that threads onto those big threads. Some malfunction/mechanical failure caused that nut to back itself off. Its a nylock nut with a healthy amount of nylon lock that should take quite a bit of torque (~50 ft lbs) to overcome the nylock.
With the rod out of the piston, the oil flows freely through that hole in the piston, and no force is exerted between the pin-ends of the cylinder.
If that rod-thread is damaged beyond usability, I can almost guarantee that two replacement jobber cylinders will be less expensive than the replacement rod and nut from Kubota. Check those threads for damage. With that piston loose on the rod as the nut backs off, each cycle of the piston would have chewed those threads along the hole in the piston. From what I can see in your picture, those threads are kinda chewed up, but chasing them with a thread-die may clean them up and it might hold.
The piston is inside the bore of that cylinder. If it got a bit twisted or an o-ring rolled, that piston will be stuck in there HARD, and with the rod detached, theres no easy way to pull the piston out. That will be a challenge.
Before you commit to buying "seal kits" from the dealer, price the seals out. Get pricing on seals from your Kubota dealer and from a hydraulic supply / machine shop. Compare the pricing of repairing your cylinders against aftermarket/jobber cylinders from Shur-Lift or similar. It stands to reason that a few bits of nylon and rubber should be cheaper than new cylinders, but parts prices - especially dealer - being what they are, reason does not stand.
With the rod out of the piston, the oil flows freely through that hole in the piston, and no force is exerted between the pin-ends of the cylinder.
If that rod-thread is damaged beyond usability, I can almost guarantee that two replacement jobber cylinders will be less expensive than the replacement rod and nut from Kubota. Check those threads for damage. With that piston loose on the rod as the nut backs off, each cycle of the piston would have chewed those threads along the hole in the piston. From what I can see in your picture, those threads are kinda chewed up, but chasing them with a thread-die may clean them up and it might hold.
The piston is inside the bore of that cylinder. If it got a bit twisted or an o-ring rolled, that piston will be stuck in there HARD, and with the rod detached, theres no easy way to pull the piston out. That will be a challenge.
Before you commit to buying "seal kits" from the dealer, price the seals out. Get pricing on seals from your Kubota dealer and from a hydraulic supply / machine shop. Compare the pricing of repairing your cylinders against aftermarket/jobber cylinders from Shur-Lift or similar. It stands to reason that a few bits of nylon and rubber should be cheaper than new cylinders, but parts prices - especially dealer - being what they are, reason does not stand.
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