I entered ISO 4402+ISO 11171 in Google Search and came up with some 993 hits.
Here is one from another Forum.
Also:
BTW, I have yet to come across hardly anyone in industry in my area who would have any idea what the standards are and even if there are any. One company with 2,500+ employees has a department who checks fluids but seem to have no input when it comes to specifying what kind of filtration is required.
I find Filtration is another whole area of Fluid Power that is overlooked at best and downright left out on any hydraulic circuit except those using Proportional or Servo Valves. Filter the fluid or don't run the machine if it has these valves.
Many machines I have worked on have at best a 125 Micron Suction Strainer plus nothing else.
I relate that lack of applying Filters to the lack of knowledge in the Fluid Power world.
Had two machines with two 185 GPM Radial Piston Pumps each that were being rebuilt as many as five times a year and everyone thought that was normal.
Installed some LAARGE 5 Micron offLine Filters on the 5,000 Gallon Tanks which only lasted about two hours before going into bypass so we changed to 10 Micron until they started lasting a week or more. Then went to the 5 Micron Elements and they finally are up to about two months before starting to bypass. These were not small filter units either.
Now the pumps, which run 24/7/5 run 5-7 years and are changed out now due to reduced cycle time not a full Crater condition.
BTW, A pump rebild cost's about $18-22,000 each since the company that made them went out of business some 25 years back.
I specify a Suction Strainer on all pumps and on Piston Pumps of larger size I use a fixed volume pump to Super Charge it so it will not be subject to cavitation. I use a Pressure Switch on the Super Charge Pump out let that will not allow the main pumps to start and will shut the pumps down when pressure drops below a minimum level. The PLC is warned of increasing back pressure so filters can be changed at regular hut down periods.
The Super Charge Pump pushes the oil through a 5 Micron filter before it goes to the pump/s and all excess flow is the OffLine filterin loop.
On the Return Lines I use a 10 Micron Non-Bypass Filter with pressure indicators to monitor Back Pressure to give a visual and/or electric feedback signal that warns of the need for filter change or shuts the pump/s down finally at the next cycle end.
Some call it OverKill but no one complais when pumps run 10 years 24/7/7.
Bud Trinkel, Fluid Power Consultant
HYDRA-PNEU CONSULTING