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    Need help to size a hydraulic cooler? This is the ultimate guide for you…

    Emmegi Cooler

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    Everything you need to know to size an Emmegi hydraulic oil cooler

    Did you know that overheating is second in the list of most common problems with hydraulic equipment? (Leaks rank first.) As a means of power transmission, hydraulics have many advantages. But overall efficiency is NOT one of them.

    Let’s take a closer look at efficiency levels…

    A single-reduction gearbox has an efficiency of 98 to 99 percent; double-reduction 96 to 97 percent and triple-reduction 95 percent. Moreover, a chain drive in good condition has an efficiency of 97 to 98 percent.

    A high-performance piston pump has an efficiency of 92 percent. If this pump drives a piston motor, the overall efficiency of this hydraulic drive, is 85 percent (0.92 x 0.92 x 100 = 85). And this is without considering losses through valves and conductors.

    And that’s all good! A gear pump or motor in good condition is 85 percent efficient. So a gear pump driving a gear motor has a best-case efficiency of 0.85 x 0.85 = 0.72. That’s 72 percent – not considering losses through valves and conductors.

    In conclusion, what this tells us is that every hydraulic system with a high, continuous power input (and therefore output power) requires an oil cooler. This will keep the oil temperature stable and within acceptable limits.

    Tops tips when sizing a hydraulic oil cooler

    Step 1

    The first thing to consider when sizing a hydraulic oil cooler is the continuous input power of the system. We like to work in kilowatts, because kilowatts of input power given up as heat, equates near enough to the same amount of required heat rejection in kilowatts. In other words, it’s a lot simpler than working in horsepower and BTU/h.

    For example, if a hydraulic system has a continuous input power of 100kW and it’s 80 percent efficient, then 80kW is available at the output to do useful work and 20kW is converted to heat. So in other words, the oil cooler must be capable of rejecting at least 20kW of heat to maintain an acceptable and stable oil temperature.

    Step 2

    The next thing to consider is the native efficiency of the system. This is almost impossible to calculate, but can be estimated based on the type of system and the components used.

    As explained above, a piston pump driving a piston motor is 85 percent efficient. And a gear pump driving a gear motor is only 72 percent efficient. Now let’s assume that both systems had a continuous input power of 100kW and that allowances were made for additional losses in conductors and valves. In this case, a cooler capable of rejecting around 25kW of heat would be required for the piston pump/motor system and 35kW of heat rejection for the gear pump/motor system.

    These percentages need to be increased if the system features an accumulator with significant storage volume, or servo or proportional valves. In fact, it’s not unheard of for a proportional or servo hydraulic system to require installed cooling capacity of between 50 and 90 percent of input power! For 100kW of input power, this would mean a cooler that can reject between 50 and 90kW of heat.

    Step 3

    In the final analysis, the size of the cooler selected as a percentage of input power is usually an arbitrary number based on all the above considerations. And ideally, with a margin of safety built in. It’s better for the cooler to be too big rather than too small. Perhaps not from a cost perspective, but certainly for reliability. In other words, installing insufficient cooling capacity is a mistake, and usually a costly one.

    Emmegi’s range of hydraulic coolers and heat exchangers comprises: ATEX coolers, marinised coolers, AC and DC fan-driven coolers, hydraulic fan-driven air blast coolers, mobile and offline air-blast cooling units and water cooled heat exchangers. Find out more here >>>

    Emmegi Coolers and Heat Exchangers
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