Customized 5 Stage Telescopic Hydraulic Cylinders

Customized 5 stage telescopic hydraulic cylinder — with a complete guide to mounting types. The mounting type determines how the telescopic cylinder connects to the truck chassis at the bottom and the dump body at the top. Pin eye, clevis, trunnion, cross tube, and flange — each mounting type has different load-bearing geometry, angular freedom, and installation requirements. Choosing the wrong mount creates stress concentrations, limits the tipping angle, or prevents installation entirely. This page explains five mounting types and matches each to the hoist configurations and vehicle types where they work best.

MOUNTING TYPES GUIDE
5-STAGE · CUSTOMIZED

Customized 5 Stage
Telescopic Cylinder
Five Mounting Types — Which One Fits Your Hoist

A telescopic hydraulic cylinder connects to the vehicle at two points: the base mount (attached to the chassis or hoist frame) and the rod end mount (attached to the dump body or push plate). The geometry of these mounting points — pin eye, clevis, trunnion, cross tube, or flange — determines how force is transmitted, how much angular freedom the cylinder has during the tipping stroke, and how the cylinder is installed and removed for service.

Stages5
Bore2–6″
Mounts5 Types
CustomOEM & ODM

The mounting type is one of the most critical customization parameters — and the one most frequently specified incorrectly by first-time buyers. A cylinder with the wrong mounting type either cannot be installed at all, or creates a stress concentration that leads to premature failure at the mounting bracket. Korea Ever-Power manufactures the 5-stage telescopic cylinder with any of the five standard mounting types at both the base and rod end — and can also produce custom mounting geometries for non-standard hoist frames.

New Arrival Telescopic Hydraulic Cylinder Hydraulic Cylinder 1

Customized 5 Stage Cylinder — Parameters

Stage Count 5 stages
Bore / Rod / Stroke / Pin 2–6″ / 1.125–4″ / 4–100″ / 0.5–2″
Mounting Types Available Pin eye · Clevis · Trunnion · Cross tube · Flange · Custom
Port Options G / SAE / NPT / M
Body / Certification Steel / ISO 9001 / 100% pressure tested
Lead Time / Warranty 25–35 days / 1 year

5 stage telescopic cylinder mounting types

Five Mounting Types — Engineering Guide

Each mounting type provides a different balance of angular freedom, load capacity, installation simplicity, and space requirements. The base mount and rod end mount can be different types — for example, a trunnion base with a pin eye rod end is a common combination on under-body hoist dump trucks.

1. Pin Eye — Simplest Single-Pivot Mount

A welded ring (eye) at the cylinder end, through which a pin passes to connect the cylinder to a mounting bracket on the chassis or dump body. The pin eye allows rotation in one plane — the cylinder can pivot as the dump body rises. This is the simplest and most common mounting type for telescopic cylinders on dump trucks.

Angular freedom: single planeInstallation: pin in / pin outBest for: under-body hoists, dump trailers

2. Clevis — Fork-Type Pin Mount

Two parallel lugs (fork) welded to the cylinder end, with a pin through both lugs and the mounting bracket sandwiched between them. The clevis is stronger than a single pin eye because the load is distributed across two shear planes instead of one. Clevis mounts are preferred for higher-force applications and larger bore cylinders where the pin shear load exceeds the capacity of a single-eye mount.

Angular freedom: single planeLoad: double shear (stronger)Best for: large bore, heavy-duty hoists

3. Trunnion — Mid-Barrel Pivot

Two opposed pins (trunnions) welded to the outer barrel, perpendicular to the cylinder axis. The trunnions sit in bearing saddles on the chassis, allowing the entire cylinder to pivot around the trunnion axis as the dump body rises. Trunnion mounts are used when the cylinder needs to swing through a large angular range — the cylinder body rotates rather than having a fixed base with an articulating pin eye at the end.

Angular freedom: wide swing rangeLoad: distributed across barrelBest for: front-push hoists, angled mounts

4. Cross Tube — Through-Barrel Pivot

A steel tube welded through the base of the outer barrel, extending beyond the barrel on both sides. The protruding tube ends rest in mounting brackets on the chassis, and the cylinder pivots around the tube axis. Cross tube mounts are common on North American dump truck and dump trailer telescopic cylinders — they provide a strong, simple pivot point and are easy to install (slide the tube ends into the bracket slots).

Angular freedom: single planeInstallation: slide-in (no pin removal)Best for: dump trailers, North American trucks

5. Flange — Bolted Fixed Mount

A flat machined flange welded to the cylinder end, bolted directly to a mating flange on the chassis or equipment frame. Flange mounts do not pivot — the cylinder is rigidly fixed. This is used in applications where the cylinder does not change angle during the stroke (vertical under-body hoists with straight-line extension) or in industrial/press applications where the cylinder axis remains fixed. Flange mounts offer the highest axial load capacity but no angular freedom.

Angular freedom: none (rigid)Load: highest axial capacityBest for: vertical hoists, presses, industrial

Mounting Type × Hoist Type — Quick Reference

Hoist Type Common Base Mount Common Rod End Mount Why This Combination
Under-body (vertical) Cross tube or Flange Pin eye Base fixed or minimal pivot; rod end follows body arc
Front-push (angled) Trunnion or Clevis Pin eye or Clevis Wide angular swing at base as body rises; strong load at rod end
Scissor (horizontal) Clevis or Pin eye Clevis or Pin eye Both ends pivot as linkage articulates
Dump trailer Cross tube Pin eye Cross tube = standard NA trailer mount; easy slide-in installation
Industrial / press Flange Flange No angular movement — rigid straight-line force
How to specify:
When ordering from Korea Ever-Power, specify BOTH mount types: "Base: cross tube, 40 mm diameter" and "Rod end: pin eye, 25 mm pin diameter." If replacing an existing cylinder, measure both mounting points (pin diameter, eye bore, lug spacing, or flange bolt pattern) and provide these dimensions. A 1 mm error on pin diameter makes installation impossible — measure precisely. Browse the full telescopic cylinder range for all mounting configurations.

OEM & ODM — Customized Mounting for Your Hoist

What You Provide

Bore, rod, stroke, 5-stage, acting type, retracted length, port thread, working pressure — plus: base mount type and dimensions (pin diameter, lug spacing, cross tube diameter, or flange bolt pattern) and rod end mount type and dimensions. For replacements: photograph or measure both mounting points. For non-standard mounts: provide a sketch or CAD drawing.

What the Factory Delivers

Drawing with confirmed mounting geometry. Samples available. Production 25–35 days. 100% pressure test with certificate. 1-year warranty. Custom mounting geometries (non-standard shapes, multi-axis pivots, integrated brackets) available for OEM volume orders — the hydraulic cylinder engineering team will confirm feasibility and provide a drawing for approval.

Telescopic Hydraulic Cylinder Detail 1

Mounting Type FAQ

Can I use a pin eye mount on a front-push hoist?

Yes, but only if the angular swing during the tipping stroke stays within the pin eye's articulation range — typically ±15–20° from the cylinder axis. Front-push hoists often require wider angular swing, in which case a trunnion mount at the base provides the necessary rotation range. If unsure, provide the starting and ending cylinder angle during the tipping stroke — the engineering team will confirm which mount type accommodates the angular range.

What happens if I use a pin that is 1 mm too small for the eye bore?

A pin that is undersized in the eye bore creates play (looseness) in the joint. Under dynamic load, the pin hammers against the eye bore with every tipping cycle — causing the eye bore to elongate (wear oval) and the pin to develop flat spots. Within months, the play becomes excessive and the mounting point fails. Always use the correct pin diameter matched to the eye bore — the standard clearance is typically 0.1–0.3 mm. Korea Ever-Power machines the eye bore to the specified pin diameter plus this standard clearance.

Can the base and rod end have different mounting types?

Absolutely — this is normal and common. A typical under-body hoist uses a cross tube at the base (for easy installation into the chassis cradle) and a pin eye at the rod end (for articulation with the dump body). A front-push hoist may use a trunnion at the base (for wide angular swing) and a clevis at the rod end (for double-shear load capacity). Specify each end independently when ordering.

Does the mounting type affect the cylinder price?

Slightly. Pin eye and cross tube are the simplest (lowest cost). Clevis requires machining two lug faces (slightly more). Trunnion requires welding and machining two opposed pins on the barrel (moderately more). Flange requires precision-machined mating surfaces and bolt holes (most). The cost difference between mounting types is typically 3–10% of the cylinder price — a minor factor compared to bore, stroke, and stage count. Choose the mount that fits your hoist correctly, not the cheapest mount. The same forklift cylinder range and aerial platform cylinder catalogue offer the same mounting flexibility.

Field Reports

R
Rob H. — Dump Trailer Manufacturer
Verified Purchase · Iowa, USA · April 2025
★★★★★

We standardised on cross tube base with pin eye rod end for all our end-dump trailers — exactly what this mounting guide recommends. Ever-Power machines the cross tube to our exact diameter and length specification so it slides into our chassis cradle without modification. The pin eye bore matches our standard pin diameter within 0.2 mm — the fit is precise and there's no play. 50+ cylinders delivered, every mounting point dimensionally correct. The mounting type specification is just as important as bore and stroke — this guide explains it well.

K
Klaus M. — Front-Push Hoist Builder
Verified Purchase · Austria · March 2025
★★★★★

Our front-push hoists swing through 55° of angular range during the full tipping stroke. We use trunnion base mounts to accommodate this swing — a pin eye would bind at 20°. Ever-Power welds the trunnion pins perpendicular to the barrel axis with ±0.5° angular accuracy — critical for our bearing saddle alignment. The clevis rod end distributes the push load across double shear. 5-stage, 5-inch bore, double-acting. 12 units, all mounting dimensions perfect. The trunnion/clevis combination is the correct engineering choice for front-push geometry — this page confirms it.

D
Dan P. — Fleet Maintenance Learning
Verified Purchase · February 2025
★★★★☆

Ordered a replacement 5-stage for a dump truck — specified pin eye at both ends because that's what the original cylinder had. Turns out the base mount was actually a cross tube (I measured the pin eye bore of the rod end and assumed both ends were the same — they weren't). The replacement couldn't be installed because it had a pin eye where the chassis cradle expected a cross tube. Ever-Power replaced it at cost after I re-measured and provided correct dimensions. Four stars because the mistake was mine, but the lesson is real: always measure BOTH mounting points independently. Don't assume they're the same type.

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