Forklift Hydraulics FAQ
What causes a forklift to drift or lower on its own?
Mast drift under load is almost always caused by one of two things: a worn cylinder piston seal allowing hydraulic fluid to bypass around the piston internally (drift occurs even with the machine off), or a leaking control valve spool that bleeds pressure back to the reservoir in the neutral position (drift only occurs with the machine running). Use the controlled load hold test - machine off, rated load at mid-height for five minutes - to determine which component is responsible before ordering parts. The distinction matters: cylinder = seal kit, valve = control valve service or replacement.
How do I know if my forklift hydraulic pump is failing?
The first sign of pump wear is reduced flow, not reduced pressure. You'll notice slower lift speed under rated load before you lose the ability to lift at all. A failing pump may also produce a whining or moaning sound under load. To confirm: a hydraulic pressure test at the pump outlet shows whether pressure is within spec. A pump that maintains pressure but produces low flow output is worn internally and should be replaced. Do not confuse pump wear with a clogged filter - check the filter first, it's the less expensive diagnosis.
Can I use any hydraulic fluid in my forklift?
No. The OEM viscosity specification must be followed. Most counterbalanced IC forklifts use an AW32, AW46, or AW68 hydraulic oil depending on the ambient operating temperature range - but many electric forklifts use a combined hydraulic/transmission fluid with a completely different specification. Using the wrong viscosity causes the pump to run hot, accelerates seal deterioration, and can void warranty coverage on rebuilt components. Check the operator's manual - not the reservoir label - for the correct specification.
How long do forklift cylinder seals last?
Under normal operating conditions with clean fluid and proper maintenance, cylinder seals typically last 3,000–6,000 operating hours. Seals degrade faster in high-cycle applications, outdoor or dusty environments (the wiper seal takes the abuse), extreme temperature swings, and whenever the hydraulic fluid is contaminated. Rod scoring is the most common accelerator - a scored rod destroys new seals in a fraction of the normal service interval. If you're replacing seals more frequently than expected, inspect the rod surface carefully before reinstalling.
Do I have to replace both lift cylinders at the same time?
On two-cylinder mast designs (one cylinder per side), best practice is to replace seal kits in both cylinders when one is leaking - even if the second cylinder isn't showing visible symptoms yet. Both cylinders have operated the same hours under the same conditions, and the second set of seals is approaching the same wear point. Doing both at the same time saves the labor cost of a second disassembly within a short interval. Single-cylinder mast configurations and triplex mast designs may differ - consult the OEM parts manual for your specific machine.
Why is my forklift lifting slowly even with a full hydraulic fluid reservoir?
A full reservoir rules out low fluid as the cause. The next most likely causes in order: (1) A clogged hydraulic filter restricting return flow - check and replace the filter first, it's the least expensive fix. (2) A worn pump producing reduced flow output - confirm with a hydraulic pressure and flow test. (3) A relief valve set below spec - the system is bypassing pressure back to tank before full lift pressure is reached. (4) Internal cylinder bypass - piston seals are worn enough that pressure bleeds past the piston under rated load. Each has a distinct test and a distinct repair.
What happens if I keep operating with a hydraulic leak?
Three things happen simultaneously: the fluid level drops (eventually starving the pump and causing cavitation damage), the leaking rod seal deteriorates further and the leak volume increases, and hydraulic oil on the floor becomes a slip and fire hazard. External hydraulic leaks are a defined OSHA violation under 1910.178(q)(1) - a machine with an active leak must be removed from service until repaired. Beyond compliance, the cost of a deferred seal kit repair is almost always more than the repair itself once pump damage, fluid replacement, and downtime are factored in.
What is the difference between a lift cylinder seal kit and a tilt cylinder seal kit?
Lift cylinders and tilt cylinders operate at different bore sizes, stroke lengths, and sometimes different working pressures - so their seal kits are not interchangeable. Lift cylinders are free-standing vertical cylinders and typically larger in bore. Tilt cylinders are smaller, mounted at an angle, and work in both extend and retract directions under load. Always specify which cylinder position you're ordering for (lift or tilt), plus the forklift model and serial number. Some machines also use sideshift cylinders and attachment cylinders that require their own distinct kits.
How often should I change forklift hydraulic fluid?
Most OEMs specify a full fluid change every 1,000 operating hours or annually, whichever comes first. However, fluid should be sampled and evaluated at 500 hours - if it's discolored (dark brown or black indicates thermal degradation; milky indicates water contamination), change it immediately regardless of hours. Always change the hydraulic filter when changing the fluid. In high-cycle, outdoor, or chemically exposed environments, a 500-hour change interval is a better baseline practice.
Where can I buy forklift hydraulic parts cross-referenced to my machine?
MagnaSource stocks hydraulic seal kits, filters, hose assemblies, cylinder components, and control valves cross-referenced to Toyota, Hyster, Yale, Crown, Clark, Caterpillar Towmotor, Cascade, Case, Ingersoll-Rand, JLG, Sky Trak, Skyjack, Snorkel, Lull, Moffett, Teledyne Princeton, and other major makes. Shop at magnasourceinc.com. Have your model number and OEM part number ready for the fastest cross-reference. Browse the June 2026 Hydraulics Specials for current discounts on 32 popular hydraulic parts.