There are good, inexpensive canister-type oil filters readily available for removing particulates (and water) from oil. General concepts to design into your systems:
High viscosity oils require more filters, operated in parallel to get adequate flow. Filter manufacturers often design for diesel fuel viscosity (which are most of there sales). Flow and pressure-drop design information for 320, 460, and 680 weight oils are difficult to find, but fairly easy to test. If I remember correctly, 1.5 GPM will flow through a modern 10 micron filter canister, with a 20 psi pressure drop. Older filter media fabrics won’t flow nearly as much.
Old gearbox designs had brass screens (150 micron), if any filtering. Good quality, old gearbox drives from the 1950’s used 40 micron filters, and now the best OEM gearbox manufacturers filter oil on their large drives to 20 micron. For most gearbox applications, 10 micron on-line filtering is optimum. 10 micron won’t filter out most EP oil additives and will remove the bulk of damaging particulates.
Include an over-pressure bypass device for plugged filters (the “can” on a canister filter can handle about 300 psi). I used a 150 psi, in-line rupture disk, and it worked well.
Use a SS screen filter canister (100 micron) prior to the oil pump to keep out the “rocks and rabbits”. You’ll be amazed – in normal application it will rarely (if ever) plug, which indicates most debris in normal gearbox applications are less than 100 micron.
Use an oil flow switch to further protect your equipment.
Include an oil sample valve.
Design your oil piping on CAD – it makes the installation easier and better.
Example: Four 12 micron canister filters on a 600 hp gearbox plugged within two hours after a “clean” overhaul. The filters plugged a second time after 2 days, a third time after 2 weeks, and a 4th time after 2 months. Obviously lots of small dust-size crap was in the 300 gallons of oil, even after the crews did their very best to clean the equipment.
Look at used filter debris under a microscope – you can learn a lot about your equipment and environment.
Call if you want to discuss particular applications. Paul Juhnke, 641-423-9363