Core Characteristics of Brass Hydraulic Manifolds (Categorized by
Pressure, Application Scenarios, Wear Resistance, Corrosion
Resistance, and Material Machinability)
Brass hydraulic manifolds serve as the "control hub for oil flow"
in hydraulic systems, and their performance relies heavily on
material properties and structural design. The following is a
detailed explanation from five key dimensions:
1. Pressure Adaptation Range: Focus on Medium and Low-Pressure
Systems with Clear Application Scenarios
The mechanical strength of brass (tensile strength of approximately
300-500 MPa, yield strength of approximately 150-300 MPa)
determines that its pressure adaptation upper limit is lower than
that of steel/cast iron manifolds. The core adaptation range and
characteristics are as follows:
- Normal Working Pressure: Most brass hydraulic manifolds are used in medium and low-pressure systems of 10-25 MPa, such as small hydraulic stations and control circuits of
pneumatic-hydraulic composite equipment, and can stably withstand
continuous oil pressure without deformation or cracking.
- Pressure Upper Limit Restriction: A few brass manifolds that have undergone reinforced processing
(such as quenching and tempering, wall thickness optimization) can
withstand a pressure of 30-35 MPa in the short term, but long-term
use is prone to micro-deformation of internal oil passages due to
material fatigue, thereby affecting oil flow control accuracy.
Therefore, they are not recommended for high-pressure (>35 MPa) hydraulic systems (such as the main circuits of large construction machinery and
high-pressure injection molding machines).
- Pressure Adaptation Logic: Brass has better plasticity than steel. Under medium and low
pressures, it can compensate for machining errors (such as sealing
gaps at oil passage interfaces) through slight deformation,
improving sealing reliability. However, under high pressure,
plastic deformation will be excessive, which will damage the
sealing structure instead. This is the core reason for its "medium
and low-pressure positioning".
2. Application Scenarios: Focus on Miniaturization, Low Pollution,
and Corrosive Environments
Based on the material properties of brass, its application
scenarios are highly concentrated in medium and low-pressure
hydraulic systems that require "lightweight, corrosion resistance,
and low pollution". Typical scenarios include:
- Control Circuits of Small Hydraulic Equipment Such as small hydraulic cylinders (such as medical bed lifting,
small fixture clamping) and valve groups supporting micro hydraulic
pumps. The lightweight nature of brass manifolds (density of
approximately 8.5 g/cm³, 15% lighter than steel) can reduce the
overall weight of the equipment, and the machining accuracy of
internal oil passages is easy to control, suitable for fine control
of small oil flow (<20 L/min).
- Environments with Slight Corrosion Such as auxiliary hydraulic systems of marine equipment (such as
small lifting devices on ship decks) and hydraulic stations of food
processing machinery (such as hydraulic drives of sauce mixing
equipment). The corrosion resistance of brass can resist slight
corrosion from seawater mist and food raw material residues,
avoiding blockage of oil passages due to rust of manifolds.
- Low-Pressure Pneumatic-Hydraulic Composite Systems Such as pneumatic booster hydraulic circuits (used for small
workpiece stamping). Brass manifolds can be adapted to both
compressed air (low pressure) and hydraulic oil (medium pressure)
at the same time, and are not prone to rust due to gas-liquid
mixing.
- Precision Hydraulic Control Scenarios Such as auxiliary manifolds of hydraulic servo valves (used for
micro-feed control of machine tools). The low cutting resistance of
brass enables it to process high-precision oil passages (aperture
tolerance ±0.01 mm), ensuring the stability of oil flow.
3. Wear Resistance: Rely on Surface Treatment, Suitable for Medium
and Low Wear Scenarios
Pure brass has low hardness (Brinell hardness HB60-80) and is less
wear-resistant than steel (HB200+) or cast iron (HB150+). Surface
treatment is required to improve wear resistance. The actual
performance is as follows:
- Untreated State: In clean hydraulic systems with low oil flow velocity (<1 m/s)
and no solid impurities, short-term wear resistance can be
maintained (service life is about 1-2 years); if the oil flow
contains impurities (such as metal debris), it is easy to cause
wear on the inner wall of the oil passage, resulting in internal
leakage.
- After Surface Treatment: Through "hard chrome plating" (surface hardness HV800+),
"nitriding treatment" (surface hardness HV500+), or "PVD coating"
(such as TiN coating, hardness HV2000+), wear resistance can be
improved by 3-5 times, and it can be adapted to scenarios with oil
flow velocity ≤3 m/s and moderate wear (such as control circuits of
small hydraulic motors).
- Wear Resistance Limitations: Even after surface treatment, brass manifolds are still not suitable for high-wear scenarios, such as high-pressure and large-flow systems (strong oil flow
scouring force) and scenarios where hydraulic oil contains a large
number of solid particles (such as hydraulic systems of mining
machinery). Otherwise, the surface coating is easy to fall off,
leading to rapid failure of the manifold.
4. Corrosion Resistance: Significant Natural Advantages, Suitable
for Multiple Corrosive Environments
The corrosion resistance of brass (copper-zinc alloy, zinc content
30%-40%) comes from the easy formation of a "passivation film"
(cuprous oxide or basic copper carbonate) on its surface, which can
isolate medium erosion. The specific performance is as follows:
- Corrosion Resistance to Water-Based Hydraulic Oil: In commonly used water-glycol hydraulic oil and emulsion, brass
manifolds have no corrosion phenomenon, suitable for hydraulic
systems that require fire prevention (such as auxiliary equipment
of power plants).
- Corrosion Resistance to Mild Chemical Media: It can withstand weak acids (such as industrial wastewater with
pH 5-8), weak alkalis (such as sodium hydroxide solution with
concentration <5%), and organic solvents (such as antioxidants and
rust inhibitors in hydraulic oil), and is not prone to chemical
corrosion.
- Corrosion Resistance to Marine Environment: In marine atmosphere containing salt spray, the corrosion rate of
brass is about 0.01-0.03 mm/year (much lower than that of steel,
which is 0.1-0.3 mm/year), suitable for offshore or small hydraulic
equipment on ships.
- Corrosion Resistance Shortcomings: It is not resistant to strong oxidizing media (such as
concentrated nitric acid, chromic acid) and media containing
ammonia/cyanide, and "dezincification corrosion" will occur (zinc
is preferentially corroded, resulting in a porous and loose
structure on the surface of the manifold). Therefore, such
application scenarios should be avoided.
5. Material Machinability: Excellent Machining Performance,
Suitable for Complex Structures
Brass is a representative of "machining-friendly" in metal
materials. Its machinability is low, and it is suitable for mass
production of manifolds with complex structures. The core
advantages are as follows:
- Machinability in Cutting: Brass has low cutting resistance (about 60% of steel), and is
easy to process by milling, drilling, boring, tapping and other
processes. Moreover, the machining surface roughness is easy to
control (up to Ra0.8-1.6 μm), suitable for machining surface
mounting holes (such as threaded holes, positioning holes) of
manifolds and internal complex oil passages (such as cross oil
passages, blind holes). The machining efficiency is 30%-50% higher
than that of steel manifolds.
- Casting Machinability: Brass has a low melting point (about 900-950 °C, lower than 1538
°C of steel) and good fluidity. It can be made into near-net-shape
manifold blanks by sand casting and die-casting processes (reducing
subsequent machining volume), especially suitable for mass
production of small and medium-sized manifolds (weight <5 kg).
- Forming Machinability: Brass has good plasticity and can be made into special-shaped
structures (such as arc manifolds, integrated manifolds) by forging
and extrusion processes to enhance material density (reduce
internal pores), so as to meet the needs of special installation
spaces.
- Machining Cost: Due to high machining efficiency and low tool wear (brass has
only 1/3 of the tool wear of steel), the machining cost of brass
manifolds is 20%-40% lower than that of steel manifolds of the same
specification, suitable for cost control of small and medium-sized
hydraulic equipment.
In summary, the core advantages of brass hydraulic manifolds are
"good corrosion resistance, easy machining, and lightweight", and
the core limitations are "low pressure resistance and weak wear
resistance". Therefore, their application scenarios are highly
focused on small hydraulic systems with medium and low pressure,
low wear, and mild corrosion requirements, and they are
high-quality alternatives to steel/cast iron manifolds in such
scenarios.