How Little Leaks Keep Hydraulic Equipment Users Poor

Jan. 20, 2015
It's now more important than ever to ensure that every dollar spent on operating and maintaining hydraulic equipment is a dollar well spent. Furthermore, it's imperative that the hydraulic equipment you design, repair or maintain does not LEAK money.

It's now more important than ever to ensure that every dollar spent on operating and maintaining hydraulic equipment is a dollar well spent. Furthermore, it's imperative that the hydraulic equipment you design, repair or maintain does not LEAK money.

Hydraulic systems are often considered perennial consumers of oil and in turn, make-up fluid an inherent cost of operating hydraulic equipment. But to calculate the real cost of one or more 'minor' leaks on a hydraulic machine, the expense associated with all of the following must be considered:

  •     Make-up oil.
  •     Clean-up.
  •     Disposal.
  •     Contaminant ingression.
  •     Safety.

Make-Up Oil

The cost of make-up oil should be the most obvious cost of hydraulic system leaks. I say 'should be' because many hydraulic equipment users fail to consider the accumulative effect on the cost of one or more slow leaks over time.

Consider a piece of hydraulic equipment losing 0.5cc of oil per minute. That's 30cc per hour, and 720cc over 24 hours - perhaps not a significant loss. But over a month this equates to 22 liters; and 263 liters over the course of a year. Assuming an oil cost of $3 per liter, the annual cost is around $800.

Clean-Up

Where there are oil leaks there is almost always a clean-up cost to consider. Clean-up costs include:

  •     labor;
  •     equipment required to empty sumps and drip trays, and degrease machine surfaces; and
  •     consumables such as detergents and absorbent material.

Assuming it costs $20 per week in labor, equipment and consumables to clean up the piece of equipment discussed above, the annual clean-up bill totals more than $1,000.

Disposal

I can remember a time when waste oil companies used to pay for the privilege of emptying waste oil tanks. These days they bill you take it away. Environmentally acceptable disposal of waste oil, and absorbent material containing waste oil, costs money. Assuming transport and disposal cost of $1 per liter, the annual disposal costs attributable to the leakage rate discussed above amounts to $263.

Contaminant Ingression

Where oil leaks out, contaminants such as air, particles and water can get in. Costs to consider here include:

  •     component damage and fluid degradation as a result of contaminant ingress;
  •     downtime caused by equipment reliability problems; and
  •     removal of ingested contaminants.

Safety

In many situations, oil leaks can pose a safety hazard. Like the costs associated with contaminant ingression, the costs associated with the hazards posed by oil leaks are difficult to quantify -- short of a lost time accident actually occurring. However, active management of the safety risk posed, through for example, more frequent clean-up than may otherwise be necessary, skews this cost to a quantifiable area.

Adding Up The Cost

The annual cost of the 'little leaks' on the hypothetical piece of hydraulic equipment considered above amounts to over $2,000 per year in make-up oil, clean-up and disposal costs alone. As the above example illustrates, if multiple pieces of hydraulic equipment are involved, the accumulative cost over an extended period of time can be significant.

In other words, tolerating minor hydraulic oil leaks can be a costly mistake. And to discover six other costly mistakes you want to be sure to avoid with your hydraulic equipment, get "Six Costly Mistakes Most Hydraulics Users Make... And How You Can Avoid Them!" available for FREE download here.

About the Author

Brendan Casey Blog | Author

Brendan Casey is a war-weary and battle-scarred veteran of the hydraulics industry. He's the author of The Hydraulic Troubleshooting Handbook, Insider Secrets to Hydraulics, Preventing Hydraulic Failures, The Definitive Guide to Hydraulic Troubleshooting, The Hydraulic Breakdown Prevention Blueprint and co-author of Hydraulics Made Easy and Advanced Hydraulic Control. And when he's not writing about hydraulics or teaching it, Brendan is flat-out helping consulting clients from a diverse range of industries solve their hydraulic problems. To contact him visit his company's Website:
www.HydraulicSupermarket.com

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