Military Vehicle Hydraulic & Control Panel Repair | NC Servo Technology
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Military Vehicle Hydraulic & Control Panel Repair

Independent third-party repair of servo valves and electronic control display assemblies used on military vehicles: active suspension, remote weapon stations, turret traverse, engineering vehicles, and tracked-vehicle fire-control electronics. Hydraulic bodies are commercial Moog, Parker, and Rexroth; control panels include General Dynamics Land Systems and similar OEM display assemblies.

General Dynamics Land Systems Control Display Assembly P/N B7286, spec 16104530-041, from a tracked combat vehicle, on the bench at NC Servo Technology

Where These Valves Sit

Four military-vehicle application contexts

The servo valves on tactical and combat vehicles are commercial Moog, Parker, and Rexroth bodies. Below are the four common contexts seen at the bench.

01

Active suspension

Proportional servo valves on chassis stabilization across rough cross-country movement. Common on Stryker, MRAP, and modern IFV platforms.

02

Remote weapon stations

Servo valves on RWS hydraulics for stabilization and aim-point control on roof-mounted weapon stations.

03

Engineering vehicles

Hydraulic control valves on combat engineering vehicles, bridge layers, and recovery vehicles. High-flow, high-pressure service.

04

Tracked-vehicle systems

Servo valves on transmission hydraulics and self-propelled artillery positioning systems on tracked platforms.

What NC Servo Does

Component-level repair on vehicle valves

Each unit is opened, inspected, and rebuilt at the component level. Failed parts come from inventory or off donor units. Bench verification before ship.

Pilot stage rebuild

Torque motor pilot stages, nozzle flapper, and pilot trim cleaned and aligned against documented procedures.

Spool & sleeve service

Spool wear, contamination scoring, and lap restoration on Moog Type 30 Defense, Moog 760, and Parker D1FP bodies.

Coil & feedback work

Burned coil rebuild, feedback wire repair, and LVDT verification on closed-loop suspension and weapon-station bodies.

Bench testing

Hagen-Busch and older-style hydraulic stands. Step response, hysteresis, and null shift data on request.

Donor parts service

Stock is hit or miss, but legacy hardware shows up often enough that we can pull from past jobs when we have a match. Ask about a specific part number.

Control panel work

Gunner control display assemblies, fire-control electronics, and weapon-station switch panels. Bench inspection of indicator lamps, toggle and protected-cover switches, internal wiring, and Mil-spec connectors.

Repair scope

Bench-level component work on the hardware. Vehicle qualification, depot processes, and ITAR-controlled handling stay with the customer or contractor.

Common Faults

What usually shows up on military-vehicle valves

Tactical-vehicle servo valves run in dust, vibration, and wide temperature swings. Failures fall into four categories.

Pilot stageTorque motor coil burnout, nozzle plugging from contamination, and null shift after long field service. Drives suspension wander or RWS aim drift.
Spool and bodySpool wear, contamination scoring, sticky spool action, and internal leakage past the spool.
Coil and feedbackBurned drive coils, feedback wire wear from vibration, and LVDT signal drift on closed-loop bodies.
Connector and electricalDamaged connectors, water ingress at connector boots, and contamination on connector pins after extended deployment.

Workflow

From part number to ship-back

Same four-step path through the shop whether the unit came off a depot rebuild line or a maintenance pull from a tactical or armored vehicle.

  1. 01

    Get in touch

    Call or email with the part number, equipment context, and a photo of the nameplate if it helps.

  2. 02

    Bench review

    Tech opens the unit, inspects pilot and spool, and runs it on the hydraulic stand to confirm what failed.

  3. 03

    Cost & approval

    We call back with the cost and a rough turnaround. Nothing is started without your sign-off.

  4. 04

    Repair, test, ship

    Failed components replaced from inventory or off donors, the valve verified under pressure, and shipped back.

FAQ

Common questions about military vehicle valve repair

Application-specific questions. For brand-specific FAQs, see the dedicated brand page above.

What types of military vehicle servo valves do you repair?

Commercial servo valves and proportional valves used across military-vehicle hydraulics: active suspension, remote weapon stations, turret traverse, engineering-vehicle controls, and tracked-vehicle transmission hydraulics. Bodies are commercial Moog, Parker, and Rexroth components.

Which platforms come through the bench?

Servo valves come through from M1 Abrams, Bradley M2/M3, Stryker, MRAP, armored engineering vehicles, self-propelled artillery, and other tracked or wheeled military platforms. NC Servo is independent and not affiliated with any defense contractor or vehicle OEM.

Do you handle ITAR or classified work?

No. The servo valves on these platforms are commercial hydraulic components. Bench-level component repair stays on the valve hardware. ITAR-controlled handling, security clearances, and classified processing remain with the customer or contractor.

Do you repair active-suspension proportional valves?

Yes. Proportional servo valves on chassis stabilization come through the bench for spool, sleeve, pilot, and coil work. Bench verification before ship.

Do you provide on-site service?

No. Bench repair is the standard service: ship the valve to Westland, MI for rebuild and testing, then reinstall after return.

How long does a repair usually take?

Lead time varies job to job, partly because parts are often pulled from donor boards. Give us a call with the part number and the situation.

What is the warranty?

One year on parts and workmanship for repairs and rebuilt units. Standard exclusions apply for contamination, improper installation, and out-of-spec operation.

Vehicle valve or control panel down? Send a part number

Give us a call or send a part number with the platform and the symptom. We'll check the donor pool, suggest a rebuilt match if we have one, and walk through repair or cross-brand options if we don't.

NC Servo Technology, 38422 Webb Dr, Westland, MI 48185. Phone 734-326-6666. Independent third-party repair facility working since 1975. Not affiliated with the U.S. Department of Defense, defense contractors, vehicle OEMs, Moog, Parker Hannifin, Bosch Rexroth, Vickers, or any related entities. Brand names and trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Hardware repair only - vehicle qualification, depot-process steps, and ITAR-controlled handling remain with the customer or contractor.