You can if the manufacture recommends that particular weight of oil.
i made this mistake on an hydraulic breaker pack,no damage was caused to the pump or breaker.however the operation of the equipment was sluggish until the machine really warmed up.presumably because the 46 oil is" thicker" than the iso 32
mostly oil All our the more modern cranes in our fleet use ISO 68 hydraulic fluid. In many cases, the manual calls out for ISO 32, but we use 68. I've talked it over with the manufacturers, and since we live in a hot climate, they agree that is probably equal or better. Or you can consult a fluid power specialist to determine which synthetic fluid might be a good substitute. The manuals for our very old cranes sometimes calls out for non-detergent 10-wt motor oil, but that is the same thing as what we now call ISO 32.
You need to use a piece of software capable of understanding an ISO file, or burn the file to a disk. You can use Gizmo for Windows, both the 32- and 64-bit, from here: arainia.com/software/gizmo/download.html. The latest versions of Windows, Linux, and Mac OS will allow you to burn the ISO file to a disk; once you've done so, you can use it as a regular disk. Linux allows an ISO to be mounted directly into the root file system using the "mount" command.
GBP is the ISO code for Great Britain Pound. 32 GBP means 32 British pounds.
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No, use exactly what is recommended by the manufacture.
it means for every 1 part of oil there is 32 parts of gas or you could say there is 1 oz of oil in 1/2 gallon (32 ozs) of gas just take two ozs of oil and put in one gallon of gas and mix. use two stroke oil, not motor oil.
sae 30 (above 32 degees) and sae 5w-30 (below 32 degrees)
10w-40 and the oil to gas ratio is 32:1 or 20:1
Yes in fact if you have an Intel mac you can download the 32 bit iso and run it. If you have a powerpc you can use Ubuntu if you go into the downloads for a release you will see a powerpc option.
depends you can use 33 to 1 but i would use 32-1
heavy weight (higher viscosity) 36