<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?><!-- generator=Zoho Sites --><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><atom:link href="https://www.liasotech.com/blogs/tag/gear-oil-filtration/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title>Liasotech Private Limited - Blog #Gear Oil Filtration</title><description>Liasotech Private Limited - Blog #Gear Oil Filtration</description><link>https://www.liasotech.com/blogs/tag/gear-oil-filtration</link><lastBuildDate>Fri, 05 Jun 2026 21:57:33 +0530</lastBuildDate><generator>http://zoho.com/sites/</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Gear Oil Filtration: The Complete Guide for Automotive and Industrial Machinery]]></title><link>https://www.liasotech.com/blogs/post/gear-oil-filtration-automotive-industrial-machinery</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://www.liasotech.com/Gear Oil Filtration_Blog_2_23.6.2026.png"/>Contaminated gear oil causes most gearbox failures, and standard changes leave damaging residue. Liasotech's GOFS and Lube Oil Filtration machines restore optimal oil cleanliness in 48–72 hours—without requiring any machinery shutdowns.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_fjRjSdzmTWK2zj7obzGdDA" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_GdQFVqndTjCv5wntC59nlw" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_NGgc8woRS9yk-Gnbs51Ecg" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_cFi5njeHTGq3D5SzO4IlSQ" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-justify zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p><span>India operates one of the largest bases of industrial machinery in Asia. Steel plants, cement mills, sugar factories, paper mills, mining operations, automotive manufacturing lines, wind farms — every one of them depends on gearboxes. And every one of those gearboxes depends on gear oil to survive.</span></p><p><span>Yet gear oil receives less attention than almost any other lubricant in the plant. It is changed on calendar intervals, often handled carelessly during top-ups, stored in drums exposed to moisture, and filtered — if at all — with equipment that was not designed for the viscosity and contamination profile of high-grade industrial gear oil.</span></p><p><span>The result is predictable: premature gearbox failures, unplanned shutdowns, and maintenance costs that dwarf what proper gear oil filtration would have cost in the first place.</span></p><p><span>This guide — written by Liasotech, a dedicated oil filtration machine manufacturer in India — explains everything a maintenance engineer or plant manager needs to know about gear oil contamination, why standard oil changes are insufficient, and how Liasotech's GOFS (Gear Oil Filtration System) and Lube Oil Filtration machines solve the problem for both automotive and industrial applications.</span></p><br clear="ALL"/><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>1. What Is Gear Oil and Why Does It Need Filtration?</span></h2><p><span>Gear oil is a high-viscosity lubricant formulated to protect gear teeth, bearings, and shafts in enclosed gearboxes and transmission systems. Unlike hydraulic oil (typically ISO VG 32–68) or turbine oil (ISO VG 32–46), industrial gear oils operate at much higher viscosity grades — ISO VG 150, 220, 320, 460, 680 — and must perform under far more demanding contact conditions.</span></p><p><span>The primary functions of gear oil in any gearbox — automotive or industrial — are:</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>Forming an elastohydrodynamic (EHD) oil film between meshing gear teeth to prevent metal-to-metal contact</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>Lubricating and cooling bearings, shaft seals, and housing surfaces</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>Carrying away wear particles, heat, and degradation products from critical contact zones</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>Protecting against corrosion on all internal metal surfaces</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>Absorbing shock loads during startup and sudden load changes</span></p><p><span>Gear oil achieves all of these functions only when it is clean. The moment contamination levels exceed the target cleanliness standard for the gearbox — whether from metal wear particles, water ingress, process contamination, or degraded additive packages — every one of these functions is compromised.</span></p><p><span>And yet gear oil is contaminated from the moment it enters service. New drum oil frequently arrives at cleanliness levels of ISO 20/18/15 or worse — far dirtier than the ISO 17/15/12 target that Liasotech's GOFS achieves within 48–72 hours of operation. Every oil change that puts unfiltered drum oil directly into a gearbox is introducing contamination from Day One.</span></p><br clear="ALL"/><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>2. What Contaminates Gear Oil? — Complete Reference</span></h2><p><span>Understanding the specific contamination mechanisms in gear oil is essential to selecting the right filtration approach. Gear oil faces a different contamination profile compared to hydraulic or turbine oil, largely because of the extreme contact pressures and the high viscosity of the fluid itself.</span></p><h3 style="margin-bottom:14pt;"><span>2.1 Metal Wear Particles — The Most Damaging Contaminant</span></h3><p><span>Gearboxes are contamination generators by nature. Every mesh cycle between gear teeth produces micro-wear — sub-micron and micron-scale metal particles torn from tooth flanks, bearing races, and shaft surfaces. In a large industrial gearbox running at 1,500 RPM with a 10,000-litre oil sump, tens of millions of wear particles are generated every operating hour.</span></p><p><span>These particles are not just passive debris. In gear oil contamination, metal particles are the primary abrasive agent:</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Particles between 5 and 15 microns — roughly the same size as the minimum EHD film thickness in a loaded gear mesh — are the most damaging. They are large enough to penetrate the oil film but small enough to circulate repeatedly before being captured by coarse filters.</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Each pass through a gear mesh grinds the particle further, generating two or three smaller particles from one. This is the abrasive wear cascade — a self-reinforcing cycle that accelerates gearbox wear exponentially once contamination levels exceed the target.</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Iron and steel particles are also powerful catalysts for gear oil oxidation, accelerating the breakdown of the extreme pressure (EP) additive package that gear oils depend on for film strength under shock loads.</span></p><p><span>Standard gearbox OEM filters — typically rated at 25 to 100 microns nominal — capture only the largest particles. The 5–15 micron range that causes the most wear passes straight through.</span></p><h3 style="margin-bottom:14pt;"><span>2.2 Water Contamination in Gear Oil</span></h3><p><span>Water is the second most damaging contaminant in industrial gearboxes. The sources are numerous:</span></p><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="616"><tbody><tr><td><p align="center" style="text-align:center;"><b><span>SOURCE</span></b></p></td><td><p align="center" style="text-align:center;"><b><span>MECHANISM</span></b></p></td><td><p align="center" style="text-align:center;"><b><span>TYPICAL AFFECTED EQUIPMENT</span></b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>Condensation in headspace</span></p></td><td><p><span>Thermal cycling draws humid air in; moisture condenses on cool surfaces</span></p></td><td><p><span>All enclosed gearboxes</span></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>Process water ingress</span></p></td><td><p><span>Spray, wash-down water, or process fluid enters through worn seals</span></p></td><td><p><span>Cement mills, sugar plants, paper mills, steel rolling</span></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>Cooling water leaks</span></p></td><td><p><span>Gearbox oil cooler tube failure</span></p></td><td><p><span>Large industrial drives, marine gearboxes</span></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>Rain and flood ingress</span></p></td><td><p><span>Inadequate breather protection or housing seal failure</span></p></td><td><p><span>Outdoor installations, wind turbine gearboxes</span></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>Steam condensate</span></p></td><td><p><span>Steam environment penetration</span></p></td><td><p><span>Power plant auxiliary drives</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table><p><span>Even 500 ppm of dissolved water in gear oil is enough to:</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Reduce gear tooth EHD film thickness by 20–30%, dramatically increasing surface fatigue and pitting risk</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Hydrolyse the sulphur-phosphorus EP additive package that gear oils depend on, stripping the oil of its extreme pressure protection at the worst possible moment — during shock loading</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Promote hydrogen embrittlement of high-hardness gear tooth surfaces, a failure mechanism that causes sudden brittle fracture of case-hardened teeth with almost no warning</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Initiate rust and corrosion on gear flanks, bearing races, and housing bores, generating a continuous supply of hard iron oxide particles as an additional abrasive</span></p><h3 style="margin-bottom:14pt;"><span>2.3 Process Contamination</span></h3><p><span>Industrial gearboxes rarely operate in a clean environment. Cement dust, coal fines, silica particles, metal swarf, and chemical residues all find their way into gearbox oil through vent openings, worn shaft seals, and improperly sealed inspection hatches.</span></p><p><span>In cement plants, for example, cement dust (primarily calcium silicate, Mohs hardness 5–6) entering a gearbox is one of the most abrasive contaminants a gear oil can encounter. A particle count spike caused by cement ingress can destroy a large gearbox in weeks.</span></p><p><span>Similarly, in automotive manufacturing, coolant, metalworking fluid, and stamping lubricant contamination of gearbox oil through leaking seals causes water emulsification and accelerated additive depletion.</span></p><h3 style="margin-bottom:14pt;"><span>2.4 Gear Oil Degradation — Additive Depletion and Oxidation</span></h3><p><span>Gear oils are heavily additivated — EP (extreme pressure) agents, anti-wear additives, rust inhibitors, foam inhibitors, and viscosity index improvers. Under high contact pressures and elevated temperatures, these additives are consumed. As they deplete:</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●EP film strength drops below the threshold needed to prevent scuffing under shock loads</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Anti-wear protection fails at bearing surfaces during cold starts</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Viscosity may increase (through oxidative thickening) or decrease (through additive shear degradation), both of which compromise film formation</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Foam inhibitor depletion leads to aeration, which causes micro-dieseling and accelerates further oxidative degradation</span></p><p><span>Gear oil degradation is not linear. The additive depletion induction period can be long — sometimes years for well-maintained systems. But once critical additives fall below threshold concentrations, degradation accelerates sharply. Regular oil analysis (measuring acid number, viscosity, and remaining EP additive concentration) is the only reliable way to predict this transition before gearbox damage occurs.</span></p><br clear="ALL"/><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>3. The Consequences of Contaminated Gear Oil in Automotive and Industrial Applications</span></h2><p><span>Gear oil contamination manifests differently depending on the application, but the endpoint is always the same: premature gearbox failure, unplanned downtime, and expensive repairs or replacements.</span></p><p><span><br/></span></p><h3 style="margin-bottom:14pt;"><span>In Industrial Machinery</span></h3><p><b><span>Cement and Mining Plants:</span></b><span> Ball mill and kiln drive gearboxes in cement plants are among the most heavily loaded gearboxes in Indian industry, transmitting thousands of kilowatts through large helical or planetary gear stages. Contaminated gear oil in these applications causes surface pitting, micropitting, and tooth flank scuffing — failures that are expensive to repair and carry very long replacement lead times for large gears.</span></p><p><b><span>Steel Plants:</span></b><span> Rolling mill gearboxes, pinion stands, and edger drives operate under extremely high shock loads and are particularly vulnerable to water contamination-induced hydrogen embrittlement. A single water ingress event — from a failing cooler tube or monsoon ingress through a worn breather — can cause rapid gear tooth fracture.</span></p><p><b><span>Sugar and Paper Mills:</span></b><span> These plants operate with high moisture environments year-round. Process water and steam condensate contamination of gearbox oil is a chronic problem. Without dedicated gear oil filtration, gearboxes in these applications frequently require oil changes every 3–6 months — at substantial cost — without ever truly cleaning the system.</span></p><p><b><span>Wind Turbine Gearboxes:</span></b><span> Wind turbine main gearboxes are among the most expensive components in the drivetrain — costing Rs. 50 lakh to Rs. 2 crore to replace. They operate under highly variable, often reversing loads in remote locations with limited access. Gear oil contamination is the leading cause of premature wind turbine gearbox failures globally. ISO 16/14/11 cleanliness is typically specified for wind gearboxes — a standard that requires dedicated continuous filtration, not periodic oil changes.</span></p><p><span><br/></span></p><h3 style="margin-bottom:14pt;"><span>In Automotive Applications</span></h3><p><b><span>Commercial Vehicle Transmissions and Axles:</span></b><span> In trucks, buses, and heavy commercial vehicles, contaminated gear oil in manual transmissions and rear axles causes accelerated bearing failures, synchroniser wear, and differential gear damage. The consequences in fleet operations are high maintenance costs, extended vehicle downtime, and safety risks from transmission failure in service.</span></p><p><b><span>Automotive Manufacturing Plant Gearboxes:</span></b><span> Transfer presses, body panel stamping lines, and powertrain assembly equipment all use industrial gearboxes whose oil cleanliness directly affects production uptime. Contamination from metalworking fluid, coolant, or process particulate entering gear oil systems is a persistent problem in automotive manufacturing.</span></p><p><b><span>Construction and Earth-Moving Equipment:</span></b><span> Excavators, cranes, loaders, and graders use planetary final drives and swing gearboxes operating under severe contamination conditions. Gear oil filtration on these systems directly extends component life in high-abrasive environments.</span></p><br clear="ALL"/><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>4. Why Standard Gear Oil Changes Are Not Enough</span></h2><p><span>This is the question most maintenance managers face when reviewing gearbox failure reports: &quot;We change the oil on schedule. Why are we still having gearbox failures?&quot;</span></p><p><span>The answer lies in understanding what an oil change actually does — and what it does not do.</span></p><p><b><span>What an oil change does:</span></b><span> It replaces degraded oil with fresh oil, restoring the additive package and reducing the overall concentration of degradation products in the sump.</span></p><p><b><span>What an oil change does not do:</span></b></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●It does not remove contamination from system components. Metal particles, sludge, and varnish deposits on gear housing walls, bearing cages, and oil passages remain after the drain. The new oil is immediately contaminated on first circulation.</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●It does not address the contamination source. If worn shaft seals are letting water in, or if a breather is unprotected against cement dust, the new oil faces the same contamination environment as the old oil from Day One.</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●It introduces new contamination. New drum oil is frequently at ISO 20/18/15 or worse. Adding it directly to a gearbox without pre-filtration immediately degrades the cleanliness of the refilled system.</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●It is expensive and disruptive. A single 5,000-litre gearbox oil change in a cement or steel plant requires a planned shutdown, oil disposal costs, and often 6–12 hours of downtime. With dedicated gear oil filtration running continuously, the same oil can be maintained in service-ready condition for 2–4 times the standard change interval.</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●It does not tell you anything. Oil changes are performed on calendar or hour intervals regardless of actual oil condition. Regular oil analysis with a dedicated gear oil filtration programme provides continuous data on contamination levels, water content, additive status, and wear metal trends — allowing maintenance decisions based on actual oil condition, not assumptions.</span></p><br clear="ALL"/><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>5. Gear Oil Filtration: What the Technology Needs to Handle</span></h2><p><span>High-viscosity gear oil — ISO VG 150 to 680 — presents specific challenges for filtration systems that standard hydraulic or lube oil filter carts are not designed to address.</span></p><p><b><span>Viscosity:</span></b><span> ISO VG 680 gear oil is 15 to 20 times more viscous than ISO VG 46 hydraulic oil at the same temperature. Low-flow or high-restriction filter systems cannot move high-viscosity gear oil efficiently without the right pump specification and heated pre-conditioning.</span></p><p><b><span>Particle size range:</span></b><span> The most damaging particles in gear oil are in the 5–15 micron range. Effective gear oil filtration must achieve Beta(10)c ≥ 200 or better to meaningfully reduce these particles. Nominal-rated filter elements — which are standard in most portable filter carts — may only capture 50–60% of particles at their rated size, leaving the most damaging contamination in the oil.</span></p><p><b><span>Flow rate matching:</span></b><span> The filtration flow rate must be sufficient to turn over the gearbox sump volume at the required frequency. As a general rule, a kidney-loop filtration system should turn over the sump volume 3–5 times per hour to maintain target cleanliness levels under operational contamination ingression.</span></p><p><b><span>24/7 continuous operation:</span></b><span> Gear oil contamination is an ongoing process, not an event. A filter cart used once a week for 4 hours cannot maintain target cleanliness in a gearbox that generates wear particles every minute it operates. Effective gear oil filtration runs continuously, online, as a permanent kidney-loop installation.</span></p><br clear="ALL"/><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>6. Liasotech Gear Oil Filtration Systems — GOFS and Lube Oil Filtration Machine</span></h2><p><span>Liasotech has engineered dedicated product specifically designed to solve gear oil and lubrication oil contamination in automotive and industrial machinery applications: the <b>GOFS (Gear Oil Filtration System)</b>.</span></p><p><span>Both systems are designed and manufactured in India, built for continuous 24/7 unattended operation, and proven across India's most demanding industrial environments — steel plants, cement mills, sugar factories, wind farms, and automotive manufacturing lines.</span></p><br clear="ALL"/><h3 style="margin-bottom:14pt;"><span>Liasotech GOFS — Gear Oil Filtration System</span></h3><p><span>The GOFS is Liasotech's purpose-built filtration machine for high-viscosity gear oil — designed specifically to handle the challenges of ISO VG 150 to 680 gear oils that standard filter carts cannot manage effectively.</span></p><p><b><span>How it works:</span></b><span> The GOFS uses a heavy-duty gear pump rated for high-viscosity oil service to draw gear oil from the gearbox sump and force it through a multi-stage absolute-rated filter element assembly. The filter elements are selected for the target cleanliness level and the specific viscosity grade of the gear oil in service. Filtered oil is returned to the gearbox via a dedicated return port, creating a continuous offline kidney-loop circuit that runs in parallel with the gearbox's normal lubrication circuit without interfering with it.</span></p><p><b><span>Key GOFS specifications and capabilities:</span></b></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Achieves particle count cleanliness of <b>ISO 17/15/12 or NAS Class 6</b> within <b>48–72 hours</b> of initial operation — from typical incoming contamination levels of ISO 20/18/15 or worse</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Flow rates from <b>7 LPM to 200 LPM</b> — sized to match gearbox sump volume and required turnover rate, from small automotive transmissions to large cement mill drives</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Suction strainer on the pump inlet for pump protection against large debris</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Dedicated oil sample ports for routine condition monitoring without interrupting operation</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●High pressure trip switch protects filter elements and pump against blocked filter conditions</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Designed for <b>continuous 24/7 unattended operation</b> with minimal maintenance — no operator intervention required between scheduled filter element changes</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Suitable for all industrial gear oils up to <b>680 cSt viscosity</b> and all standard lubrication oils</span></p><p><b><span>Where GOFS delivers the most impact:</span></b></p><p><span>The GOFS is the right solution when the primary contamination challenge is particulate — metal wear particles, process dust, and solid debris that accumulate in gear oil sumps over time. This covers the majority of industrial gearbox applications: cement mill drives, sugar plant gearboxes, steel rolling mill drives, paper mill section drives, mining crusher gearboxes, wind turbine main gearboxes, and automotive manufacturing plant transmissions.</span></p><p><span>A permanently installed GOFS running as a kidney-loop on a large industrial gearbox maintains ISO 17/15/12 or better continuously — the standard at which gear tooth surface fatigue life is dramatically extended, bearing life is maximised, and EP additive consumption is reduced by eliminating the pro-oxidant effect of metal contamination.</span></p><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>8. How to Know If Your Gearbox Needs a Gear Oil Filtration System</span></h2><p><span>The following indicators — any one of which should prompt a gear oil analysis and filtration assessment — are common across Indian industrial plants operating without dedicated gear oil filtration:</span></p><p><b><span>Operational warning signs:</span></b></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Gearbox oil temperature running above normal operating range without change in load</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Rising differential pressure across existing gearbox oil filters — indicating contamination loading</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Noise changes: increased gear whine, bearing rumble, or intermittent knock under load</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Increased vibration readings on gearbox casing or output shaft bearings</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Frequent filter element replacement — more often than the OEM's recommended interval</span></p><p><b><span>Oil analysis warning signs:</span></b></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Particle count above ISO 18/16/13 in gear oil (indicates high contamination, approaching damage threshold)</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Iron (Fe) above 100 ppm in spectrometric oil analysis (indicates significant gear or bearing wear)</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Copper (Cu) above 50 ppm (indicates bearing cage or bronze bushing wear)</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Water content above 500 ppm (Karl Fischer) — indicates moisture ingress requiring both filtration and sealing inspection</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Viscosity deviation more than ±10% from new oil specification — indicates additive shear or oxidative thickening</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Acid number above 1.0 mg KOH/g — indicates significant additive depletion and oxidation</span></p><p><b><span>Maintenance history warning signs:</span></b></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Oil change intervals shorter than OEM specification without a known contamination cause</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●Repeated gearbox bearing or seal failures at the same point in the drivetrain</span></p><p style="margin-left:36pt;"><span>●High oil consumption through makeup additions</span></p><p><span>If three or more of these indicators are present, a gear oil filtration system installation will almost certainly pay for itself within the first 12 months of operation through reduced oil consumption, extended component life, and reduced unplanned downtime.</span></p><br clear="ALL"/><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>9. Gear Oil Cleanliness Standards: What ISO and NAS Targets Mean for Your Gearbox</span></h2><p><span>ISO 4406:2021 and NAS 1638 are the international standards used to quantify gear oil cleanliness. Understanding these standards is essential for setting filtration targets and interpreting oil analysis reports.</span></p><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="615"><tbody><tr><td><p align="center" style="text-align:center;"><b><span>ISO CLEANLINESS CODE</span></b></p></td><td><p align="center" style="text-align:center;"><b><span>NAS CLASS</span></b></p></td><td><p align="center" style="text-align:center;"><b><span>PARTICLES &gt; 4μm PER ML</span></b></p></td><td><p align="center" style="text-align:center;"><b><span>TYPICAL APPLICATION</span></b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>14/12/09</span></p></td><td><p><span>3</span></p></td><td><p><span>&lt; 80</span></p></td><td><p><span>Precision servo hydraulics, turbine oil</span></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>16/14/11</span></p></td><td><p><span>5</span></p></td><td><p><span>320–640</span></p></td><td><p><span>Precision bearing lubrication, lube oil systems</span></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>17/15/12</span></p></td><td><p><span>6</span></p></td><td><p><span>640–1,300</span></p></td><td><p><span>Industrial gear drives, gearboxes</span></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>19/17/14</span></p></td><td><p><span>8</span></p></td><td><p><span>2,500–5,000</span></p></td><td><p><span>Heavy industrial, acceptable for older equipment</span></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><span>20/18/15</span></p></td><td><p><span>9</span></p></td><td><p><span>5,000–10,000</span></p></td><td><p><span>Typical new drum oil — too dirty for most gearboxes</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table><p><span>Most industrial gearboxes in India operate at ISO 20/18/15 or worse when unfiltered. Liasotech's GOFS achieves ISO 17/15/12 (NAS 6) within 48–72 hours — moving the oil from a contamination level that causes accelerated wear to one that is within the target range for industrial gear drives.</span></p><p><span>The difference in gearbox life between ISO 20/18/15 and ISO 17/15/12 is not marginal. Research from leading gear oil and gearbox OEMs consistently shows that reducing gear oil cleanliness from ISO 20 to ISO 17 (on the first count) extends bearing L10 life by a factor of 4 to 8 times.</span></p><br clear="ALL"/><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>10. Frequently Asked Questions: Gear Oil Filtration</span></h2><p><b><span>What is gear oil filtration and why is it necessary?</span></b><span> Gear oil filtration is the process of continuously removing solid particles, water, and degradation products from gear oil in service, using a dedicated filtration system running as a kidney loop on the gearbox sump. It is necessary because all operating gearboxes generate contamination continuously — through gear tooth and bearing wear, moisture ingress, and process contamination — at rates that far exceed what an oil change schedule can control. Without continuous gear oil filtration, cleanliness levels deteriorate progressively, accelerating wear and shortening gearbox life.</span></p><p><b><span>How is gear oil filtration different from a standard oil change?</span></b><span> An oil change replaces the bulk oil volume but does not clean the system, remove existing deposits from gear housing surfaces, or address the ongoing contamination source. Gear oil filtration runs continuously in service, maintaining target cleanliness levels at all times — before, during, and after each operating cycle. It extends oil life 2–4 times and extends gearbox component life even further, at a fraction of the lifecycle cost of repeated oil changes.</span></p><p><b><span>Can gear oil be filtered while the gearbox is running?</span></b><span> Yes. Liasotech's GOFS operates as an offline kidney-loop system connected to the gearbox sump. It draws oil from a drain point, filters it through absolute-rated elements, and returns it to the reservoir — all while the gearbox remains in normal operation. No shutdown is required for installation or operation.</span></p><p><b><span>What viscosity of gear oil can the Liasotech GOFS handle?</span></b><span> The GOFS is designed for gear oils up to 680 cSt — covering ISO VG 150, 220, 320, 460, and 680, the full range of industrial gear oils. Systems are specified by flow rate (7 LPM to 200 LPM) based on sump volume and required turnover frequency.</span></p><p><b><span>How quickly will gear oil cleanliness improve after installing the GOFS?</span></b><span> Liasotech's GOFS achieves ISO 17/15/12 or NAS Class 6 within 48–72 hours of initial operation on most gear oil systems. Initial cleanliness improvement is rapid; maintaining that level requires the system to continue operating 24/7 to counteract the ongoing contamination generated by the gearbox in service.</span></p><p><b><span>How do I know what particle cleanliness target my gearbox requires?</span></b><span> The required ISO cleanliness level for a specific gearbox is determined by the most contamination-sensitive component in the lubrication circuit — typically the rolling element bearings or servo controls. Most industrial gearboxes specify ISO 17/15/12 or NAS 6. Precision gearboxes, wind turbine gearboxes, and high-speed gearboxes with rolling element bearings below 100mm bore may require ISO 16/14/11. Liasotech engineers can advise on the correct cleanliness target for your specific equipment.</span></p><p><b><span>What is the difference between the GOFS and the Lube Oil Filtration Machine?</span></b><span> The GOFS is engineered for high-viscosity gear oils up to 680 cSt, achieving ISO 17/15/12. The Lube Oil Filtration Machine is designed for lower-viscosity industrial lubrication oils, achieving the finer target of ISO 16/14/11 or NAS 5. For a plant with both gearboxes and separate bearing lube systems, both machines are typically used — GOFS on the gearbox sumps, Lube Oil Filtration on the centralised or individual bearing lube circuits.</span></p><table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" align="left"><tbody><tr><td align="left" style="width:100%;"></td></tr></tbody></table><br/><h2 style="margin-bottom:14.9pt;"><span>Protect Your Gearboxes. Extend Oil Life. Reduce Downtime.</span></h2><p><span>Contaminated gear oil is not a maintenance problem. It is an engineering problem with an engineering solution: continuous, online gear oil filtration that maintains target cleanliness levels at all times, in every operating condition.</span></p><p><span>Liasotech's GOFS and Lube Oil Filtration machines are in service across India's most demanding industrial environments, delivering proven ISO 17/15/12 and ISO 16/14/11 cleanliness within 48–72 hours — and maintaining it, every hour the plant runs.</span></p><p><span>If your plant is experiencing gearbox failures, high oil change costs, rising filter differential pressure, or simply operating gear oil that has not been analysed recently — the conversation starts with an oil test.</span></p><p><span><a href="https://www.liasotech.com/gear-oil-filtration-systems"><b>Explore the Liasotech Gear Oil Filtration System (GOFS) →</b></a></span></p><p><span><a href="https://www.liasotech.com/oil-testing-analysis-services"><b>Request an Oil Analysis →</b></a></span></p><p><span><a href="https://www.liasotech.com/contact"><b>Contact Liasotech →</b></a></span></p><br clear="ALL"/><p><i><span>Liasotech Private Limited is an oil filtration machine manufacturer based in Jamshedpur, India, serving cement, steel, sugar, paper, mining, wind energy, power, and automotive manufacturing industries across India. For enquiries about gear oil filtration systems, contact </span></i><span><a href="mailto:sales@liasotech.com"><i>sales@liasotech.com</i></a><i> or call +91 7643993545.</i></span></p></div><p></p></div>
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</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 04:53:05 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[Understanding ISO Cleanliness Codes and Their Importance in Industrial Oil Filtration  ]]></title><link>https://www.liasotech.com/blogs/post/iso-cleanliness-codes-industrial-oil-filtration</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://www.liasotech.com/April_Article.png"/>Learn ISO 4406 cleanliness codes & target levels for hydraulic, turbine, gear & lube oil systems. Expert guide by Liasotech — India's leading oil filtration manufacturer.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_YP-sQKC6STWIVbfki5BNpw" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_pqGwocGySXWLUUSvd7VRUQ" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_dVbx5jAHSpKs6qXGJKwwiQ" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_yT7qBjXXQvaxzSqEHrQh-w" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>If you manage a steel plant, power station, cement factory, or any heavy industrial facility in India, you are dealing with one silent threat every single day: oil contamination. And the globally accepted language for measuring that contamination is the </span><span style="font-weight:700;">ISO Cleanliness Code</span><span>.</span></p><span>Whether your plant runs on hydraulic oil, turbine oil, gear oil, or lube oil — understanding ISO cleanliness codes is not optional. It is the foundation of any serious contamination control and predictive maintenance strategy.</span></div><div><span><br/></span></div><div><span><span><span>In this guide, Liasotech — India's leading industrial oil filtration machine manufacturer with 25 years of experience and 1,600+ systems installed — breaks down everything your maintenance team needs to know about ISO 4406 cleanliness codes, how to read them, what they mean for your specific oil systems, and how to achieve your target cleanliness levels.</span></span><br/></span></div><div><span><span><span><br/></span></span></span></div><p></p><h1><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">1. What Are ISO Cleanliness Codes? (ISO 4406 Standard Explained)</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</h1><div></div><p></p><div><span><span><span><span><span><div><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>ISO cleanliness codes are a standardized method defined by the International Organization for Standardization under the ISO 4406:1999 standard. They provide a universal language for quantifying the level of solid particle contamination present in industrial fluids such as hydraulic oil, turbine oil, gear oil, lube oil, and quenching oil.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>The ISO code is expressed as three numbers separated by slashes, for example: 18/16/13. Each number in the code represents a scale that corresponds to the particle count per millilitre of fluid at three specific particle sizes:</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">First Number</span><span> — captures the finest contamination. It counts every particle </span><span style="font-weight:700;">4 microns (µm) and above</span><span> — particles so small they are invisible to the naked eye, yet small enough to slip into the tightest clearances in your bearings and hydraulic components.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Second Number</span><span> — captures mid-range contamination. It counts particles </span><span style="font-weight:700;">6 microns (µm) and above</span><span> — the size range most damaging to hydraulic pumps, valves, and servo systems.</span></p><span style="font-weight:700;">Third Number</span><span> — captures the coarsest contamination. It counts particles </span><span style="font-weight:700;">14 microns (µm) and above</span><span> — these are the larger wear particles that cause visible surface damage and accelerated component failure.</span></div></span></span></span></span></span></div><div><span><span><span><span><span><span style="font-style:italic;"><span>Think of it this way — </span><span style="font-weight:700;">the first number watches the smallest threats, and the third number watches the biggest ones.</span><span> A healthy oil system needs all three numbers to be within acceptable limits for your specific machinery.&nbsp;</span></span><br/></span></span></span></span></span></div><div><span><span><span><span><span><span style="font-style:italic;"><span><br/></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></div><div></div><p></p><div><div><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:18px;">ISO 4406 Particle Size Range Reference Table</span>&nbsp;<br/></div></div><div><span><span><div><p style="margin-bottom:4pt;"><span>&nbsp;</span></p><table style="margin-left:0.344in;"><tbody><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:98.976px;"><p style="text-align:center;"><span style="font-weight:700;">ISO Code</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:145.536px;"><p style="text-align:center;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Particles per mL</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:149.472px;" class="zp-selected-cell"><p style="text-align:center;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Cleanliness Level</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:221.472px;"><p style="text-align:center;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Typical Application</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:98.976px;"><p><span>≤ 13/11/8</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:145.536px;"><p><span>Very Low</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:149.472px;"><p><span>Ultra Clean</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:221.472px;"><p><span>Servo valves, precision hydraulics</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:98.976px;"><p><span>14/12/9</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:145.536px;"><p><span>Low</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:149.472px;"><p><span>Very Clean</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:221.472px;"><p><span>High-pressure hydraulic systems</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:98.976px;"><p><span>16/14/11</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:145.536px;"><p><span>Moderate</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:149.472px;"><p><span>Clean</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:221.472px;"><p><span>Standard hydraulic &amp; turbine systems</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:98.976px;"><p><span>18/16/13</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:145.536px;"><p><span>High</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:149.472px;"><p><span>Acceptable</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:221.472px;"><p><span>Gear systems, general lubrication</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:98.976px;"><p><span>20/18/15</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:145.536px;"><p><span>Very High</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:149.472px;"><p><span>Marginal</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:221.472px;"><p><span>Low-pressure gear pumps</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:98.976px;"><p><span>≥ 21/19/16</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:145.536px;"><p><span>Extremely High</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:149.472px;"><p><span>Contaminated</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:221.472px;"><p><span>Requires immediate filtration action</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table></div><span><span>The reason ISO codes measure three particle sizes is important: smaller particles (4 µm and 6 µm) are invisible to the naked eye but are precisely sized to enter the clearances of valves, bearings, and pump components — causing abrasive wear that compounds over time. Larger particles (14 µm) indicate more severe contamination or active component wear already occurring inside the system.</span></span><br/></span></span></div><div><span><span><span><span><br/></span></span></span></span></div><div style="text-align:center;"><img src="/April_Article.png" style="width:681px !important;height:851.75px !important;max-width:100% !important;" alt="ISO 4406 cleanliness code chart for hydraulic and gear oil filtration"/><span><span><span><span></span></span></span></span></div><div><span><span><span><span><br/></span></span></span></span></div><div><h2><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">2. How to Read and Interpret an ISO Cleanliness Code</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</h2></div><div><div><div><div><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">When your oil analysis report returns a result like 18/16/13, here is exactly how to interpret it:</p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">18</span> — Counts particles <span style="font-weight:700;">4 µm and larger</span> → your oil contains between <span style="font-weight:700;">1,300 and 2,500</span> such particles per mL</p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">16</span> — Counts particles <span style="font-weight:700;">6 µm and larger</span> → your oil contains between <span style="font-weight:700;">320 and 640</span> such particles per mL</p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">13</span> — Counts particles <span style="font-weight:700;">14 µm and larger</span> → your oil contains between <span style="font-weight:700;">40 and 80</span> such particles per mL.</p>This reading — 18/16/13 — is generally considered acceptable for standard gear oil systems and general lubrication applications. However, for high-pressure hydraulic systems and turbine control systems, this level of contamination would be too high and could trigger component wear and valve stiction.</div><div><br/></div><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:18px;">The Golden Rule: Lower Numbers = Cleaner Oil = Longer Machine Life</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;<br/></div></div></div><div><span><span>The goal is always to achieve and maintain the lowest practical ISO code for your specific system. This is not about achieving laboratory-level purity — it is about reaching the cleanliness level that your most sensitive component demands.</span></span><br/></div><div><span><span style="font-style:italic;">Example: If your hydraulic system uses proportional control valves, your target ISO code should be 16/14/11 or better. If those valves see oil at 20/18/15 consistently, premature failure is inevitable — regardless of oil brand or oil change frequency.</span></span><br/></div><div><span><span style="font-style:italic;"><br/></span></span></div><div><h3><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">3. ISO Cleanliness Targets by Oil Type and Equipment</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</h3></div><div><span><span>Different industrial oil systems require different cleanliness levels. Below are the recommended ISO 4406 cleanliness targets for the oil types most commonly used in Indian manufacturing and power plants:</span></span><br/></div><div><span><span><br/></span></span></div><div><span><span><div><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Hydraulic Oil — ISO Cleanliness Standards</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Servo and proportional valves (high precision): Target ISO 15/13/10 or better</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Standard directional control valves: Target ISO 16/14/11</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Gear pumps and vane pumps (low pressure): Target ISO 18/16/13</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>High-pressure systems above 200 bar: Target ISO 16/14/11 minimum</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>Hydraulic oil cleanliness is the most critical because hydraulic components operate with extremely tight mechanical clearances — sometimes as small as 1 to 5 microns. A single particle above that clearance size can cause scoring, stiction, or valve failure.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Turbine Oil — ISO Cleanliness Standards</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Steam turbine lubrication systems: Target ISO 16/14/11</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Gas turbine hydraulic control systems: Target ISO 15/13/10</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Turbine bearing lubrication: Target ISO 17/15/12</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>Turbine oil faces the additional challenge of water contamination and oxidation at high operating temperatures. Maintaining ISO cleanliness in turbine systems requires not only particle removal but also active dehydration — which is where Liasotech's Vacuum Dehydrator Filtration Systems are specifically designed to help.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Gear Oil — ISO Cleanliness Standards</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Rolling mill and heavy gearbox lubrication: Target ISO 17/15/12</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>General industrial gearboxes: Target ISO 18/16/13</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Open gear systems: Target ISO 19/17/14 minimum&nbsp;</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>Gear oil in steel and cement plants is especially prone to contamination due to dust, metal particles, and process water ingress. Achieving ISO 17/15/12 in a rolling mill environment is challenging — but Liasotech has done it for some of India's largest steel producers, including Tata Steel, JSW Steel, and SAIL.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Lube Oil (Lubricating Oil) — ISO Cleanliness Standards</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Compressor and blower lubrication: Target ISO 17/15/12</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Plain bearings: Target ISO 18/16/13</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:12pt;"><span>Rolling element bearings: Target ISO 16/14/11&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><span>Lube oil systems in mining and cement plants often run continuously for months between planned shutdowns. Continuous offline filtration using a dedicated Lube Oil Filtration System ensures cleanliness targets are maintained without stopping production.</span></div><div><span><br/></span></div><div><h4><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">4. ISO vs NAS: Understanding Both Cleanliness Standards</span>&nbsp;</h4></div><span><span>Indian industrial plants frequently encounter both ISO 4406 and NAS 1638 (National Aerospace Standard) cleanliness standards. While both measure particle contamination, they use different scales and are reported differently. Here is a direct comparison:</span></span><br/></span></span></div><div><span><span><span><span><div><table><tbody><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:136.032px;"><p style="text-align:center;"><span style="font-weight:700;">NAS Class</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:258.528px;"><p style="text-align:center;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Approx. ISO 4406 Equivalent</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:222.528px;"><p style="text-align:center;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Used In</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:136.032px;"><p><span>NAS 0-1</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:258.528px;"><p><span>12/10/7</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:222.528px;"><p><span>Aerospace, ultra-precision systems</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:136.032px;"><p><span>NAS 3-4</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:258.528px;"><p><span>16/14/11</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:222.528px;"><p><span>Steel plant hydraulics (Liasotech target)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:136.032px;"><p><span>NAS 5-6</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:258.528px;"><p><span>17/15/12</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:222.528px;"><p><span>Turbine &amp; lube oil systems</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:136.032px;"><p><span>NAS 7-8</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:258.528px;"><p><span>18/16/13</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:222.528px;"><p><span>Gear oil, cement plant machinery</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:136.032px;"><p><span>NAS 9-10</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:258.528px;"><p><span>19/17/14</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:222.528px;"><p><span>Contaminated — action required</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:136.032px;"><p><span>NAS 11+</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:258.528px;"><p><span>20/18/15+</span></p></td><td style="vertical-align:top;width:222.528px;"><p><span>Critical failure risk</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table><span>&nbsp;</span></div><span><span>Most original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) in India specify NAS cleanliness targets for their machinery — particularly for steel plant hydraulics where NAS Class 4 to NAS Class 6 is the common requirement. Liasotech's filtration systems are engineered to achieve NAS Class 3 (equivalent to approximately ISO 16/14/11) in as little as 48 hours of continuous filtration.</span></span><br/></span></span></span></span></div><div><span><span><span><span><span><span><span><span style="font-style:italic;">Liasotech Result: A leading steel plant in Odisha achieved NAS 4 from NAS 9 in under 48 hours and lube oil at NAS 7 in under 72 hours — after three previous vendors had failed to deliver.</span></span><br/></span></span></span></span></span></span></div><div><span><span><span><span><span><span><span><span style="font-style:italic;"><br/></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></div><div><h5><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">5. Why ISO Cleanliness Codes Matter for Indian Industrial Plants</span><span style="font-style:italic;">&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></h5></div><div><span style="font-style:italic;"><br/></span></div><div><div><div><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">Many plant maintenance teams in India still rely on fixed oil change schedules — changing oil every 3 or 6 months regardless of actual oil condition. This approach is both wasteful and risky. Here is why ISO cleanliness monitoring is a superior strategy:</p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Cost Savings on Oil Procurement and Disposal</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">Industrial lubricants are expensive. When you filter and maintain oil to the correct ISO cleanliness level, you extend oil life by 3 to 5 times. One cement plant that commissioned Liasotech's Lube Oil Filtration System reduced oil consumption by 40% — a direct, measurable cost saving.</p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Dramatic Reduction in Machine Breakdowns</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">Contaminated oil is the number one cause of premature bearing failure, valve stiction, pump cavitation, and gearbox wear. By maintaining target ISO codes, plants consistently report 40 to 60% reductions in unplanned equipment failures — translating directly to higher production uptime.</p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Extended Component Life and Lower Maintenance Costs</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">Each time an ISO code increases by one level, particle count doubles. That exponential contamination drives exponential wear on precision components. Plants that actively monitor and control ISO cleanliness spend significantly less on spare parts, seals, bearings, and pump replacements year over year.</p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Predictive Maintenance and Early Failure Warning</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">Tracking ISO codes over time creates a powerful predictive maintenance dataset. A sudden spike in the 14 µm particle count, for example, often indicates active component wear — giving maintenance teams warning before a catastrophic failure occurs. This is proactive maintenance, not reactive fire-fighting.</p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">OEM Warranty Compliance</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">Many hydraulic and lubrication equipment manufacturers require documented proof that oil cleanliness targets have been maintained for warranty claims to be valid. Oil analysis reports showing ISO code trends provide exactly that documentation. Liasotech's Oil Analysis and Testing Services help plants build this maintenance record.</p><h5>&nbsp;<span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">6. How to Achieve and Maintain Your Target ISO Cleanliness Code</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</h5></div><div><br/></div><div><div><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>Knowing your target ISO code is the first step. Achieving and sustaining it is an ongoing process. Here are the proven methods Liasotech recommends based on 25 years of field experience across Indian steel, power, cement, mining, and automobile plants:</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Step 1: Establish a Baseline with Oil Analysis</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>Before you can improve, you must measure. Send an oil sample for analysis — Liasotech provides Oil Analysis and Testing Services — to determine your current ISO code. This baseline tells you how far from target you are and guides the right filtration approach.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Step 2: Deploy Offline (Kidney Loop) Filtration</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>Offline filtration runs a dedicated filtration loop parallel to your main system, continuously cleaning the oil without interrupting machine operation. This is the most effective method for achieving and sustaining low ISO codes. Liasotech's Hydraulic Oil Filtration Systems, Turbine Oil Filtration Systems, and Lube Oil Filtration Systems are all designed for continuous offline operation.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Step 3: Remove Water Contamination with Vacuum Dehydration</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>Water in oil accelerates oxidation, promotes bacterial growth, and contributes to particle contamination. If your oil analysis shows water content above acceptable levels — common in turbine oil, gear oil, and quenching oil systems — a Vacuum Dehydrator Filtration System is required. Liasotech's vacuum dehydration units are specifically engineered to remove free, emulsified, and dissolved water from industrial oils.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Step 4: Address Carbon and Varnish with Electrostatic Filtration</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>For quenching oil and high-temperature hydraulic systems, conventional mechanical filtration cannot remove sub-micron carbon particles and varnish deposits. Liasotech's Electrostatic Oil Filtration System uses an electric charge to attract and capture these ultra-fine contaminants — restoring oil to ISO cleanliness levels that standard filters cannot achieve.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Step 5: Monitor Continuously and Trend Over Time</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><span>ISO cleanliness management is not a one-time exercise. Establish a regular oil sampling schedule — monthly for high-criticality systems, quarterly for lower-risk systems — and track your ISO code trends over time. Consistent monitoring catches problems early, before they become expensive failures.</span></div><br/></div></div><div><h5 style="margin-bottom:8pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">7. Common Mistakes Manufacturing Plants Make with Oil Cleanliness</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</h5><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>Based on Liasotech's experience working with 1,600+ Manufacturing plants across Jharkhand, Odisha, Maharashtra, West Bengal, Chhattisgarh, and other states, these are the most common and costly oil cleanliness mistakes:</span></p><ol><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Relying on colour or smell to judge oil quality — contamination that affects ISO codes is invisible to the naked eye</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Changing oil on a fixed calendar schedule rather than condition-based monitoring</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Topping up oil reservoirs with unfiltered, new oil — even new oil can have ISO codes of 18/16/13 or worse straight from the drum</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Ignoring breather contamination — dirty breathers allow particle ingress every time the reservoir breathes</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Using a single point-of-use filter and assuming the system is protected — offline kidney loop filtration is almost always required for high-criticality systems</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Not documenting ISO code trends over time — losing the early warning signal that trending provides</span></p></li></ol><div><div><h5 style="margin-bottom:8pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">8. Liasotech: Helping Indian Industry Achieve ISO Cleanliness Targets</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</h5><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;"><span>For over 25 years, Liasotech Private Limited has been the trusted partner for industrial plants across India seeking to achieve and maintain ISO cleanliness targets. Headquartered in Jamshedpur, Jharkhand — India's industrial heartland — we manufacture, supply, service, and rent oil filtration machines built for the demanding conditions of Indian heavy industry.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Our Filtration Solutions for ISO Cleanliness Management</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><ol><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Hydraulic Oil Filtration Systems — Achieving ISO 16/14/11 and better for steel, auto, and mining plants</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Turbine Oil Filtration Systems — Maintaining ISO 16/14/11 for power generation assets</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Gear Oil Filtration Systems — Delivering ISO 17/15/12 for rolling mills and cement plants</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Lube Oil Filtration Systems — Continuous offline filtration for bearings and compressors</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Vacuum Dehydrator Systems — Water removal for turbine and gear oil systems</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Electrostatic Oil Filtration Systems — Sub-micron carbon and varnish removal for quenching oil</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Oil Analysis and Testing Services — Baseline measurement and ongoing ISO code monitoring</span></p></li><li><p style="margin-bottom:5pt;"><span>Filter Machine Rental Services — For projects, commissioning, or as-needed deep cleaning</span></p></li></ol></div><span><span style="font-weight:700;">Proven Results Across India</span><span>&nbsp;</span></span><br/></div></div><div><table><tbody><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:619.968px;"><p><span style="font-style:italic;">Steel Plant, India: NAS 9 to NAS 4 (ISO approx. 19/17/14 to 16/14/11) in under 48 hours.</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:619.968px;"><p><span style="font-style:italic;">Cement Plant, India: Oil consumption reduced by 40%. NAS 11 to NAS 5 (approx. ISO 20/18/15 to 17/15/12) in 72 hours.</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:619.968px;"><p><span style="font-style:italic;">Power Generation Company: 50% reduction in turbine failures. Repair costs down 25% after commissioning Liasotech oil filtration system.</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;width:619.968px;"><p><span style="font-style:italic;">Automobile &amp; Ancillary Plant, Jharkhand: Machine downtime eliminated. Production efficiency significantly improved.</span></p><p><span style="font-style:italic;"><br/></span></p><p></p><div><h5 style="margin-bottom:8pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</h5><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">What is a good ISO cleanliness code for hydraulic oil?</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">A good ISO cleanliness code for hydraulic oil is typically 16/14/11 for standard systems and 15/13/10 for high-pressure or servo valve systems. The lower the number, the cleaner the oil and the longer your components will last.</p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">What is the difference between ISO 4406 and NAS 1638?</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">ISO 4406 is the international standard that reports contamination at three particle size ranges (4 µm, 6 µm, 14 µm) as a three-number code. NAS 1638 is an older American standard that uses a single class number. Both measure particle cleanliness but use different scales. Most Indian OEMs reference NAS classes; ISO 4406 is the global standard used in oil analysis reports.</p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">How often should I test oil for ISO cleanliness?</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">For high-criticality systems like turbine hydraulics or steel plant rolling mill lubrication, monthly testing is recommended. For standard industrial systems, quarterly testing is the minimum. After any system intervention — flushing, component replacement, or new oil addition — always retest to confirm cleanliness levels.</p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">Can I improve ISO cleanliness without changing the oil?</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">Yes — and this is exactly what Liasotech's filtration systems do. Through continuous offline filtration, even heavily contaminated oil can be cleaned to target ISO codes without oil replacement. This saves significant cost in both oil procurement and disposal.</p><p style="margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;">What causes ISO cleanliness codes to deteriorate quickly?</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">Common causes include dirty breathers allowing atmospheric dust ingress, water contamination from process leaks or condensation, built-in contamination from new components, wear particle generation from poorly maintained equipment, and introducing unfiltered top-up oil into the reservoir.</p><p style="margin-bottom:8pt;">&nbsp;</p><h5 style="margin-bottom:8pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;font-size:20px;">Conclusion: ISO Cleanliness Is Not a Number — It Is a Maintenance Philosophy</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</h5><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">Understanding and actively managing ISO cleanliness codes is the single most impactful thing an industrial manufacturing plant can do to extend equipment life, reduce maintenance costs, and eliminate unplanned downtime. It is not just a number on a lab report — it is a real-time health indicator for every machine in your plant.</p><p style="margin-bottom:9pt;">The plants that invest in oil cleanliness management consistently outperform those that do not — in uptime, in maintenance spend, in production output, and in total cost of ownership of their fassets.</p>Liasotech has spent 25 years helping Indian industry achieve this. Whether you need a hydraulic oil filtration machine, turbine oil purification system, gear oil filtration service, or an on-site oil analysis — we are ready to help your plant reach and maintain its target ISO cleanliness code.</div><div><br/></div><div><h6 style="text-align:center;"><span style="font-weight:700;background-color:rgba(48, 4, 234, 0);"><span style="font-size:20px;">Ready to Achieve Your ISO Cleanliness Target?</span><br/></span><span style="background-color:rgba(48, 4, 234, 0);"><span style="font-size:20px;">Talk to Liasotech's oil filtration experts today. We'll assess your system, identify your target ISO code, and recommend the right filtration solution for your plant.</span><br/></span><span style="font-family:inherit;background-color:rgba(48, 4, 234, 0);"><span style="font-size:20px;">Phone: +91 76439 93545&nbsp;|&nbsp;Email: sales@liasotech.com&nbsp;|&nbsp;Website: www.liasotech.com</span></span></h6></div><p></p></td></tr></tbody></table></div></div></div>
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