Contamination Experiment

Experiment with this hydraulic simulation to fully understand the principles

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Power unit contamination example (Drop down 6)

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Suggested exercises and observations

1. Select 'Contamination control', from the drop-down list menu 6.

♦ Operate the cylinder and observe how the contamination comes in from the pump, cylinder and air breather.

♦ Increase the flow from the offline cooler pump to observe how the offline filters remove the contamination.

Contamination risk review execise

Study a hydraulic system in your company or use the scissor lift design project example:

♦ Write down all of the sources of contamination. Consider all environmental, duty cycle, component selection, and housekeeping procedures, etc.

♦ Measure the current level of contamination in the fluid.

♦ Suggest ways the fluid cleanliness might be improved and potential reliability improvements.

Experiment 1: Consider the ways dirt enters the circuit or is generated by the components.

Question 1: Which of the following is NOT a source of contamination? Air breathers, cylinder rods, new fluid, worn pumps, maintenance, dry starts, lunch breaks, working outside normal operating conditions.

Shutting down for lunch will not generate contaminants.

Experiment 2: Fluid contamination is measured by three-figure particle counters to ISO4406

Question 2: Which of the following readings is good and which is unacceptable? 24/20/15 - 15/13/11

24/20/15 is unacceptable but 15/13/11 a good reading

Experiment 3: Dirt particles come in every size. Large particles tend to settle out but the small ones move around the circuit in the fluid.

Question 3: Can you see the particles that cause failures in hydraulic valves with only 6 micron spool clearances?

No. Micronic dirt particles are not visible to the human eye.