Hydraulic System Fault Codes — What They Usually Mean
Hydraulic alarms usually come from pressure, temperature, flow, contamination, or position feedback. Whether the system is a press, molding machine, mobile machine, or power unit, the diagnostic pattern is similar: the controller expects hydraulic pressure or motion and isn’t seeing it within the expected window.
Common Hydraulic Fault Categories
| Fault Type | Typical Meaning |
|---|---|
| Low pressure | Pump issue, relief valve open, severe leak |
| High pressure | Blocked line, stuck valve, jammed actuator |
| High oil temperature | Cooler failure, low oil, internal leakage |
| Filter clog | Return or pressure filter differential high |
| Position error | LVDT / encoder issue or sticking cylinder |
| Pump motor overload | Mechanical drag, fluid contamination, coupling issue |
Common Causes Across Systems
- Low pressure — Pump cavitation, suction leak, low reservoir level, or relief valve stuck open.
- High temperature — Cooler clogged, fan failed, oil viscosity wrong, or excessive internal bypass.
- Erratic motion — Air in the oil, contaminated spool valves, or unstable servo valve current.
- Position alarms — Faulty LVDT, loose feedback connector, or mechanical binding.
Step-by-Step Fix {#fix}
- Identify whether the alarm is pressure, temperature, flow, or position related.
- Check oil level and oil condition — Milky, dark, or foamy oil changes the whole diagnosis.
- Verify pump suction side — Cavitation often sounds obvious before a transducer proves it.
- Inspect filters and differential indicators — A plugged return filter can create system-wide trouble.
- Check feedback devices — Many hydraulic alarms are electrical feedback faults, not true hydraulic failures.
Components Often Involved
| Component | Why It Fails |
|---|---|
| Pressure transducer | Drift or open-circuit signal |
| Solenoid valve coil | Burned coil or broken connector |
| Servo valve | Contamination sensitive |
| Cooler fan / water valve | Causes high oil temp |
| Pump coupling | Slips, breaks, or misaligns |
When to Call a Pro
Hydraulic systems can store dangerous energy even after power is off. If the fault points to servo valves, main relief settings, or internal pump damage, use a qualified hydraulic technician with pressure test equipment and proper lockout procedures.