The wide range of hydraulic applications necessitate a variety of pump designs including gear, vane, axial, and radial piston types with a variety of metallurgies. Since clearances in pumps and valves tend to be critical, it is important to provide adequate filtration (full flow or bypass, or both) to maintain the system in as clean a condition as possible, and thus minimize wear.
Ignitability of fire-resistant fluids is measured by methods such as ASTM D 5306, not by regular flash points as with petroleum-based lower-cost fluids.
Although NPSH considerations were developed and apply mainly to centrifugals, suction problems also apply to displacement pumps. May we know what type of pump you are referring to ?
On screw pumps the maximum suction lift available MSLA = 1 atm - NPSH, or in SI units = 10.36 m -NPSH. NPSHr = atmospheric pressure minus MSLA.
Some manufacturers are reluctant to publish a single value of minimum inlet pressure required for satisfactory operation for fear that it may not cover all conditions encountered in practice, such as gas entrainment or temperature fluctuations resulting in viscosity changes and changes in line losses. Gases come out of solution when a pressure below that in the reservoir exists at the pump suction.
One of the apparent effects of handling liquids containing entrained air or dissolved gas is noisy pump operation. Such a condition is usually wrongly dismissed as cavitation. In fact the mixture of oil and air is compressible, the volume in each closure is reduced as it comes in contact with the discharge pressure. This produces pulsations and noise, the intensity and frequency of which depend upon the discharge pressure, the number of closures per revolution, and the speed of rotation.
Noisy operation and vibration are objectionable, and reflect, in fact, an inefficient pump performance that should be corrected. Proper pump/piping design and proper speed selection can go a long way towards overcoming the noise problem. d23 checking suggestions are to the point.