Hydraulic Oil Can Make a Major Difference to Power Consumption

Brendan Casey
Tags: hydraulics

I recently came across an instructive case study. I think that you will find it interesting and important. In the quest for improved fuel consumption, the manufacturer of an engine-powered, mobile hydraulic machine replaced the fixed-displacement pump powering the machine’s attachment with a variable-displacement unit.

The ground drive on the machine already featured a variable piston-pump (hydrostatic transmission), and so upgrading the attachment’s hydraulic circuit to a more efficient configuration was considered logical progression by the machine’s design engineers.

When this modification was tested, the engineers were shocked to find that fuel consumption had actually increased by 12 to 15 percent! Upon analysis, the hike in fuel consumption was attributed to an increase in oil viscosity brought about by a drop in operating oil temperature of 30 degrees Celsius. In other words, the “thicker” oil had resulted in extra drag on the hydrostatic transmission powering the ground drive, causing the machine to use more fuel.

The machine employed a two-section, combination heat exchanger for both hydraulic oil and engine coolant (which was sized for the original, fixed-displacement pump) with a hydraulic fan drive. The fan drive was thermostatically controlled based on engine coolant temperature.

The drawback with this arrangement is, due to the engine being thermostatically controlled and the hydraulic system not, air flow through the combined heat exchanger depends entirely on engine temperature. This meant that the reduction in heat load from replacing the fixed pump with a variable-displacement unit resulted in a significant reduction in hydraulic oil temperature (normally a good thing!).

The engineers blocked off most of the hydraulic oil section of the cooler and ran the test again. This returned fuel consumption to the original level, but no significant improvement was seen.

It was concluded that the modification tested could result in a small cost saving with respect to a reduction in size of the oil cooler. But with fuel consumption being more important than any modest saving in cooling capacity, the idea of paying more for a pump that resulted in the oil being kept at a lower operating temperature – but increased fuel consumption – was irreconcilable to the machine’s engineers.

Take-aways from this Tale

One of the key take-aways from this case study – particularly if you own or are responsible for hydraulic equipment – is the impact that hydraulic oil temperature, and therefore viscosity, can have on fuel consumption.

To recap the key points of the story:

In other words, if your hydraulic oil is too thick, you’ll pay for it at the fuel bowzer or electricity meter. (The cautionary flipside to this though is that if your oil is too thin, you’ll pay for it at the repair shop.)

Assuming this trial was conducted at the same ambient temperature for both pump options, a 30-degree drop in hydraulic oil temperature is quite remarkable. This may, in part, be explained by the combination heat exchanger installed on the machine. As hydraulic oil viscosity increases, the engine works harder (burns more fuel) and the cooling fan (controlled by engine temperature) runs harder, which means more heat is dissipated from the hydraulic oil and, therefore, hydraulic oil viscosity increases further. It’s kind of a viscous circle.

Another take-away from this story, which is pertinent to machine designers and (by extension) to the people who buy their machines, is that most designers do not treat the oil as the key component of the hydraulic system that it is.

The hydraulic oil’s viscosity, viscosity index or the optimum viscosity number for the hydraulic components in the system apparently were not considered during the test. This suggests that the baseline, or “normal”, fuel consumption of the machine was just a happy coincidence.

The Power Efficiency Diamond

Even after having discovered that fuel consumption goes up with oil viscosity, and although the possibility of reducing the installed cooling capacity was acknowledged and contemplated, there was apparently no consideration given to changing the oil’s viscosity to match the increased efficiency of the system. Nor was the ambient temperature (or any variation thereof) during the test mentioned either. In other words, the machine designers failed to properly consider all four sides of what I call The Power Efficiency Diamond of a hydraulic machine (Figure 1).

Power efficiency means the ratio of power out to power in. Ninety horsepower out from 100 horsepower in is an efficiency of 90 percent. Ninety horsepower out from 110 horsepower in is an efficiency of 82 percent. And, 90 horsepower out from 120 horsepower in is an efficiency of 75 percent. Note that in all three cases, output power remains the same at 90 horsepower; it’s just that the input power (and, therefore, fuel or electricity consumption) required to attain it keeps going up!

The four sides of The Power Efficiency Diamond of a hydraulic machine are all interrelated. Change any one and the symmetry or balance of the diamond is affected.

Designed Efficiency reflects the “native” efficiency of the hardware chosen for the system; the number of power-wasting devices present, such as proportional valves, flow controls and pressure-reducing valves; and losses “designed in” by the dimensions and configuration of all the necessary conductors (pipes, hoses, adaptors and manifolds).

On the opposite side of the diamond, Installed Cooling Capacity, as a percentage of continuous input power, should reflect the designed or native efficiency of the hydraulic system. In other words, the lower the native efficiency, the greater the installed cooling capacity.

Adjacent to installed cooling capacity is the Ambient Air Temperature in which the hydraulic machine has to operate. This directly influences the hydraulic system’s operating oil temperature. And, operating oil temperature largely determines Oil Viscosity, (the “weight” of the oil used). This completes the Power Efficiency Diamond.

From a Machine Designer’s Perspective

A machine designer has no control over Ambient Air Temperature, although that person does need to know what this number is. But the designer does (or at least should) determine the other three variables; Design Efficiency, Installed Cooling Capacity and Oil Viscosity. And as the pictorial representation of the Power Efficiency Diamond illustrates (and this article’s case study demonstrates), no one of these variables can be considered in isolation.

Looking at the Power Efficiency Diamond from a machine owner’s perspective, it’s helpful to appreciate that even after the machine is designed, built and filled with oil, Design Efficiency, Installed Cooling Capacity and Ambient Air Temperature are moving targets that affect operating oil viscosity and, therefore, power (fuel or electricity) consumption.

The possibility of variation in Ambient Air Temperature, particularly if the machine is moved between locations with different climatic conditions, is fairly obvious.

And while Design Efficiency doesn’t vary, actual operating efficiency typically deteriorates over time due to wear and tear. Similarly, while Installed Cooling Capacity, as a percentage of input power, doesn’t change over time, the effectiveness of it can be reduced by wear and tear of cooling circuit components and, in the case of air-blast heat exchangers, variation in ambient air temperature and altitude.

Finding the Sweet Spot

Getting a hydraulic machine into its power efficiency “sweet spot” requires informed design. Keeping it there requires that change in the dependent variables be kept to a minimum. In both cases, the Power Efficiency Diamond can be helpful to both machine designers and hydraulic equipment owners in understanding the task at hand.