Pneumatic motion depends on exhausting air as well as supplying it. A clogged silencer, undersized port, restricted tube, flow control installed in the wrong direction, or contaminated valve can trap backpressure and slow a cylinder or valve return.
The fault often appears only under load or at production speed. Cylinder pressure should be measured on both sides during motion. A chamber that remains pressurized after the command changes indicates restricted exhaust or valve leakage. Removing a silencer for diagnosis may confirm the cause, but the machine should not be operated unprotected in production.
Exhaust components must provide the required flow while controlling noise and contamination. Repeated silencer blockage is evidence of upstream oil, water, or seal wear and should not be treated as an isolated maintenance item.
