Aviation & Airport GSE | Hydraulic Fluid Compatibility

Keserasian Bendalir Hidraulik Tahan Api Silinder Condong Forklift untuk Peralatan Sokongan Darat Lapangan Terbang

A technical reference guide for airport GSE managers, procurement engineers, and hydraulic system specialists evaluating forklift tilt cylinder compatibility with fire-resistant hydraulic fluids — covering seal material selection, barrel treatment requirements, and operational performance implications for cargo handling and ramp operations at Colombia’s major international airports and beyond.

Why Fire-Resistant Hydraulic Fluid Changes Everything for Airport Forklift Tilt Cylinder Specification

Airport ramp environments present a hydraulic fluid specification challenge that simply does not arise in most other forklift and ground support equipment (GSE) applications. Aviation fuel — jet kerosene and avgas — is present throughout the apron and cargo handling areas of any commercial airport, and many aviation regulatory authorities and airport operators mandate or strongly recommend the use of fire-resistant hydraulic fluids (FRHF) in GSE equipment that operates in fuel-contaminated ramp zones. When this mandate extends to the cargo handling forklifts and ramp loaders used in airside cargo facilities, it directly affects every hydraulic component in the system — including the forklift tilt cylinder, whose seal package, barrel coating, and internal plating must all be chemically compatible with the FRHF grade specified by the airport or airline ground handler.

The challenge is not simply a matter of swapping fluid. Fire-resistant hydraulic fluid types differ fundamentally in their chemical composition from standard mineral oil, and the differences matter significantly to hydraulic cylinder seal life. A forklift tilt cylinder configured for standard ISO VG 46 mineral oil — the default for most general-purpose warehouse and industrial equipment — will very likely experience seal swelling, degradation, or premature failure if refilled with a water-glycol FRHF or phosphate ester fluid without a seal compound change, a conversion that can turn a functional tilt cylinder into a leaking one within weeks of the fluid switch. Understanding which FRHF type is specified at your airport, and confirming that the forklift tilt cylinder configuration in your GSE fleet is compatible with that fluid, is a foundational equipment reliability and fire safety task for any airport ground handler or cargo operator.

This article examines the four main categories of fire-resistant hydraulic fluid in use across global aviation GSE applications, the seal materials and barrel treatment specifications that make a forklift tilt cylinder compatible with each, and the regulatory and operational context within which Colombian airports — including El Dorado International in Bogotá, José María Córdova in Medellín, and Rafael Núñez in Cartagena — manage hydraulic fluid specification for their ground handling fleets.

Forklift tilt cylinder precision manufacturing for airport GSE applications

Fire-Resistant Hydraulic Fluid Types and Forklift Tilt Cylinder Seal Compatibility

ISO 6743-4 classifies fire-resistant hydraulic fluids into four main categories, each with distinct chemical characteristics that determine their compatibility with the elastomers, PTFE, and metal surfaces of a forklift tilt cylinder. Airport GSE operators and hydraulic system engineers should confirm exactly which category is in use at their facility before specifying tilt cylinder seal packages or approving existing equipment for service in an FRHF-mandated zone.

ISO Class Fluid Type Common Name Tilt Cylinder Seal Compatibility Barrel/Rod Notes
HFA High water content fluid (>80% water) HWCF EPDM, PTFE; NBR incompatible Requires corrosion-treated bore and rod; zinc and cadmium incompatible
HFB Water-in-oil emulsion Invert emulsion Polyurethane, NBR acceptable; verify with fluid supplier Moderate corrosion risk; pH monitoring essential
HFC Water-glycol solution Aqueous glycol Polyurethane with reservations; EPDM, PTFE preferred Zinc, cadmium, magnesium incompatible; steel with anti-corrosion treatment required
HFD Synthetic anhydrous fluid (phosphate ester) Phosphate ester FKM (Viton) required; NBR, PU, EPDM incompatible Compatible with standard steel; aggressive toward standard paints — epoxy coating required

The column headed “Tilt Cylinder Seal Compatibility” in the table above is the most operationally critical row for airport GSE hydraulic engineers. It shows why a single standard seal kit — the polyurethane and nitrile (NBR) combination used in the vast majority of general-purpose forklift tilt cylinder assemblies — cannot simply be transferred into FRHF service without verification. HFD phosphate ester fluids in particular are aggressive toward polyurethane and NBR at a rate that can reduce seal life from thousands of hours to weeks if the wrong seal compound is fitted, producing the kind of sudden seal failure that grounds equipment at precisely the wrong moment in a busy cargo handling operation.

The water-based fluids — HFA and HFC — present a different but equally important compatibility concern: they can attack metal surfaces that mineral oil protects by forming a lubricant film. In a forklift tilt cylinder, this means the honed bore surface and the hard chrome rod require corrosion protection beyond what a standard mineral-oil-service cylinder provides. Zinc and cadmium plating systems — sometimes used on accessory hardware in standard cylinder assemblies — are categorically incompatible with HFA and HFC fluids and must be replaced with chromate conversion coating, stainless alternatives, or electroless nickel where these materials would contact the fluid.

Manufacturing Structure for FRHF-Compatible Forklift Tilt Cylinder

Designing a forklift tilt cylinder for fire-resistant hydraulic fluid service in an airport GSE application requires structural decisions at the manufacturing stage that cannot easily be retrofitted after assembly. The most fundamental of these is the sealing system architecture: the seal groove geometry, compression ratio, and backup ring configuration must be matched to the specific seal compound specified for the FRHF type in use, because different elastomers have different hardness, swell behaviour, and compression-set characteristics that affect how the groove must be dimensioned to achieve long-term sealing effectiveness.

For phosphate ester HFD service, FKM (Viton) seals require seal grooves designed to accommodate the harder, less compliant characteristics of this compound compared to polyurethane. An FKM seal installed into a forklift tilt cylinder groove dimensioned for a softer polyurethane seal will be under-compressed and prone to extrusion at system pressure, particularly during the dynamic pressure spikes that occur during tilt direction reversal on a cargo-handling forklift operating at rated load. This is why specifying a forklift tilt cylinder for FRHF service is not simply a matter of changing the seal material code at the point of order — it requires confirming that the cylinder’s groove specification was designed and validated for the intended seal compound.

The rod gland assembly in an FRHF-service forklift tilt cylinder also incorporates a wiper seal matched to the chemical compatibility of the working fluid. In HFC water-glycol service, the wiper must clear glycol solution from the rod before it contacts the primary seal, while preventing moisture from entering behind the wiper where it could initiate internal corrosion. In HFD phosphate ester service, the wiper compound must itself be FKM to prevent the phosphate ester contaminating the wiper’s elastomer and causing it to swell inward, increasing wiper drag on the rod to the point where it accelerates chrome wear and introduces stick-slip into the tilt cylinder’s movement response.

EP-HCY series forklift tilt cylinder construction for fire-resistant fluid service

Material System: Component-by-Component FRHF Compatibility

A forklift tilt cylinder specified for airport GSE FRHF service must have every wetted and fluid-adjacent component reviewed for chemical compatibility with the specific fire-resistant hydraulic fluid category in use. The following component-by-component breakdown covers the main material considerations for common FRHF types in airport ground handling.

Piston and Rod Seals

FKM (Viton) for HFD phosphate ester; EPDM or PTFE-backed for HFA and HFC water-based fluids. Standard polyurethane and NBR must be avoided in both HFD and HFA service. The forklift tilt cylinder seal kit for airport FRHF service must explicitly state the elastomer compound, not just the physical dimensions.

Piston Rod Plating

Hard chrome plating on the Φ-series rod surface is compatible with most FRHF types when applied to the specifications used for standard mineral oil service, but the underlying steel requires enhanced anti-corrosion pre-treatment for HFA and HFC water-based service where the rod base metal will see water contact in the event of any chrome damage during field operation.

Barrel Internal Honing Surface

Standard steel barrel hone finish is compatible with HFB and HFD fluids without additional treatment. For HFA and HFC, the absence of the protective lubricant film that mineral oil provides means the honed bore requires an iron-phosphate or alkaline-zinc conversion treatment, or the fluid must include adequate corrosion inhibitor package maintained at the correct concentration throughout service.

External Paint and Coating

HFD phosphate ester dissolves many standard polyurethane topcoats and some epoxy primers over extended exposure, requiring an HFD-resistant epoxy system on the cylinder exterior in installations where external fluid splash or drip contact is expected. Water-based HFC and HFA fluids are generally less aggressive toward standard paint but require confirmation with the specific fluid product data sheet.

Hardware and Accessories

Any zinc-plated hardware — bolts, bleeder screws, port plugs — in contact with HFA or HFC fluid must be replaced with stainless steel or treated non-zinc alternatives. This extends to the mounting clevis pin hardware and any bracket bolting that could become wetted by fluid during a seal failure event in service at an airport ramp location.

Working Principle and FRHF Performance Effects on Forklift Tilt Cylinder Function

The fundamental operating principle of a forklift tilt cylinder remains unchanged regardless of hydraulic fluid — the forklift tilt cylinder regardless of the hydraulic fluid type: pressurised fluid directed into the cap-end chamber extends the piston rod, rotating the mast forward; fluid directed into the rod-end chamber retracts the rod, tilting the mast backward. What changes significantly with FRHF is the fluid’s viscosity behaviour, lubricity, and the way it interacts with the surfaces in the cylinder it contacts during operation.

HFC water-glycol fluids — the most commonly mandated FRHF type for cargo handling forklift equipment in many airport operations — have significantly different viscosity-temperature characteristics compared to mineral oil. At the low temperatures that can occur during night ramp operations in Colombia’s highland airports like El Dorado (Bogotá, 2,549 m altitude) where overnight temperatures can drop to near freezing at elevation, HFC viscosity increases sharply, potentially producing the sluggish tilt response that operators associate with cold-weather mineral oil operation. This means airport cargo forklift operators should anticipate slower initial tilt response from cold-start HFC-filled cylinders, which affects the duty calibration of counterbalance valve settings on tilt circuits compared to mineral oil baselines.

HFD phosphate ester fluids, by contrast, have excellent viscosity stability across temperature ranges and superior lubricity compared to water-based FRHF options — making them technically preferable for forklift tilt cylinder performance in demanding, high-cycle airport cargo handling applications. However, the stringent seal compatibility requirement for FKM seals and the aggressiveness toward standard paint and certain soft metals makes HFD specification more complex to manage across a mixed GSE fleet that may include forklift tilt cylinder equipment from multiple manufacturers with different internal material specifications. A documented forklift tilt cylinder parts and fluid specification register is essential for airports managing HFD-fluid fleets to prevent incorrect seal kit installation during maintenance.

Application Scenarios in Airport Ground Support Equipment

The forklift tilt cylinder with FRHF compatibility serves specific GSE roles across Colombian and international airport cargo and ramp operations.

Air Cargo Forklift Operations (Airside)

Cargo forklifts operating inside airside cargo terminals at El Dorado International and other Colombian international airports — where fuel contamination risk from aircraft operations mandates FRHF use under airport authority requirements — use FRHF-compatible forklift tilt cylinder assemblies for pallet, unit load device (ULD), and loose cargo handling throughout the airside cargo cycle.

Belt Loader and Container Loader Hydraulics

Airport belt loaders and container loaders use hydraulic lift and tilt cylinders throughout their mechanical structure, with the forklift tilt cylinder principle applied in the load platform tilt control that adjusts cargo presentation angle during loading and unloading of aircraft holds. These GSE units operating on the apron adjacent to fuelled aircraft are primary candidates for FRHF mandates at most major airports.

Maintenance Hangar Ground Equipment

Aircraft maintenance hangars at José María Córdova and other Colombian airports use hydraulic forklift tilt cylinder equipment for engine component handling, fuel system part transfer, and maintenance equipment positioning. FRHF specification in hangar environments — where fuel spillage risk during aircraft maintenance tasks is significant — increasingly drives the hydraulic fluid specification for all mobile hydraulic equipment regardless of whether it is a purpose-built GSE or a standard industrial forklift in airport service.

Ramp Vehicle Hydraulic Systems

Passenger steps, aircraft service trucks, and ground power units at Colombia’s international airports often incorporate hydraulic lift and tilt functions using cylinder types equivalent to the forklift tilt cylinder, with FRHF compatibility requirements extending across the entire ramp vehicle fleet under airport authority safety programs at IATA-aligned Colombian airports.

Catering Lift Vehicle Hydraulics

Airport catering lift vehicles — used at all major Colombian international airports to deliver onboard catering to aircraft — use hydraulic cylinder systems with tilt and lift function in their loading platform design. As food safety and fire safety standards converge in airport catering operations, the selection of hydraulically compatible, food-adjacent seal materials alongside FRHF fluid compatibility makes forklift tilt cylinder specification for catering GSE a dual-compliance challenge.

Forklift tilt cylinder quality inspection for airport ground support equipment

Recommended Forklift Tilt Cylinder Models for FRHF-Rated Airport GSE

The following models from the current forklift tilt cylinder range can be configured with FRHF-compatible seal packages and chemical-resistant external coatings for airport ground support equipment applications.

EP-HCY-2 Forklift Tilt Cylinder for airport cargo handling GSE

Silinder Condong Forklift EP-HCY-2

A double-acting forklift tilt cylinder from the EP-HCY-2 series, configurable with FKM, EPDM, or PTFE seal packages for compatibility with HFD, HFA, or HFC fire-resistant hydraulic fluid types as required by the airport authority or GSE operator specification. Suitable for airside cargo forklift equipment at major Colombian and international airports operating under FRHF mandates.

EP-HCYA-3 Cylinder For Forklift Accessories airport GSE attachment

Silinder EP-HCYA-3 Untuk Aksesori Forklift

An auxiliary cylinder for forklift accessories applicable to airport GSE attachment equipment such as ULD clamps, cargo stabilisers, and load platform tilt control systems. The HCYA-3 can be specified with FRHF-compatible seal and hardware materials for deployment in airside environments where the attachment hydraulic circuit uses the same fire-resistant fluid as the main forklift tilt cylinder system.

Regulatory and Safety Standards for Airport GSE Hydraulic Equipment

Airport GSE hydraulic equipment including the forklift tilt cylinder operates within a multi-layer regulatory and standards framework combining aviation authority requirements, national fire safety regulation, and international hydraulic safety standards.

ICAO Annex 14 and Airport Fire Safety

ICAO Annex 14 Volume I establishes international standards for aerodrome physical characteristics and equipment, including fire safety requirements for the apron and runway areas. While ICAO does not mandate specific hydraulic fluid types, the fire safety framework underpins many national aviation authority requirements that drive FRHF specification for GSE hydraulic systems including forklift tilt cylinder assemblies operating in fuel-contaminated zones.

Colombia — AEROCIVIL Aeronautical Regulations

Colombia’s Unidad Administrativa Especial de Aeronáutica Civil (AEROCIVIL) administers RAC (Reglamentos Aeronáuticos de Colombia) regulations covering airport operations, GSE safety, and ground handling procedures at Colombia’s international airports. GSE operators and ground handlers at El Dorado, José María Córdova, and Rafael Núñez must comply with AEROCIVIL fire safety and equipment maintenance requirements that may reference FRHF use for airside hydraulic equipment.

IATA Airport Handling Manual (AHM)

The IATA Airport Handling Manual provides operational standards for ground handling contractors, including forklift tilt cylinder equipment specifications serving IATA member airlines. Chapter 9 of the AHM covers GSE safety and maintenance requirements including hydraulic system specifications, and many IATA-aligned airlines specify FRHF use for ground handling equipment including cargo forklifts with tilt cylinder assemblies operating in designated fire-risk zones.

NFPA 409: Aircraft Hangar Fire Protection

NFPA 409 establishes fire protection standards for aircraft hangars in the United States and is referenced internationally for hangar design and equipment requirements. Its provisions for hydraulic fluid specification in mobile equipment operating inside hangars — where the combination of fuel, lubricants, and hydraulic fluid presents compounded ignition risk — directly influence FRHF requirements for maintenance hangar forklift and GSE equipment at Colombian international airports adopting international standards frameworks.

ISO 6743-4: Fire-Resistant Hydraulic Fluids Classification

ISO 6743-4 provides the international classification system (HFA, HFB, HFC, HFD) for fire-resistant hydraulic fluids that underpins all compatibility assessment of forklift tilt cylinder seal and material specification across the GSE sector. Procurement specifications for FRHF-compatible forklift tilt cylinder equipment should reference the ISO 6743-4 class designation to ensure unambiguous communication of the fluid type for which compatibility is being claimed.

Colombia — Resolución 0312 de 2019 (Ministerio del Trabajo)

Colombian occupational health and safety regulation Resolución 0312 de 2019 establishes preventive maintenance and inspection requirements for mobile industrial equipment including forklifts, with relevance to GSE operated by Colombian ground handling contractors at AEROCIVIL-regulated airports, where hydraulic system maintenance records — including FRHF type documentation for each forklift tilt cylinder and seal replacement history — form part of the broader safety management documentation these operations must maintain.

Related Hydraulic Products

We supply hydraulic system components designed to complement the forklift tilt cylinder within complete airport GSE hydraulic systems — providing single-source supply and compatibility assurance for Colombian and international airport ground handling operators.

Tilt Cylinder series for GSE and industrial applications

Silinder Condong

Our broader tilt cylinder range includes aerial work platform and industrial machinery applications, with FRHF-compatible configurations available across the series — supporting airport operators and GSE integrators who need matched tilt cylinder and hydraulic system components across a fleet that extends beyond standard cargo forklifts to aerial lifts and maintenance platform equipment.

Hydraulic pump station series for airport GSE systems

Siri Stesen Pam Hidraulik

Our hydraulic pump station series provides matched flow and pressure supply for forklift tilt and lift circuits, with system configuration support for the specific viscosity and pressure characteristics of FRHF types used in airport GSE hydraulic circuits — supporting the complete hydraulic system compatibility that FRHF conversion of an existing GSE fleet requires beyond just replacing the cylinder seal kit.

About Our Forklift Tilt Cylinder Manufacturing

We are a specialist hydraulic cylinder manufacturer with technical experience supplying demanding industrial, aviation GSE, and material handling applications. Every forklift tilt cylinder we manufacture undergoes pressure testing — the forklift tilt cylinder passes a documented seal integrity check before dispatch, dimensional verification, and seal integrity inspection before dispatch. FRHF-compatible configurations — including FKM seal packages for HFD phosphate ester service and EPDM or PTFE-backed packages for HFA/HFC water-based fluids — are available across the EP-HCY and EP-HCYA series, with documentation confirming the seal compound and fluid compatibility for each configured unit.

Kedai Kerja

Forklift tilt cylinder factory workshop 4
Forklift tilt cylinder factory production workshop
Forklift tilt cylinder accessories application display
EP-HCY series forklift tilt cylinder show 3

Soalan Lazim

Q1. What is a tilt cylinder forklift, and how does FRHF specification affect its use in an airport cargo handling environment?
A tilt cylinder forklift is any counterbalance or reach truck equipped with a hydraulic forklift tilt cylinder that controls mast angle. In an airport cargo environment where fire-resistant hydraulic fluid is mandated by the airport authority or airline ground handler, the forklift tilt cylinder must be configured with seal materials and metal surface treatments compatible with the specific FRHF type in use — because operating a standard mineral oil-rated forklift tilt cylinder on FRHF can cause rapid seal degradation, fluid contamination, and unplanned equipment downtime in an environment where GSE reliability is directly linked to flight schedule performance.
Q2. What is a tilt on a forklift, and why does the type of hydraulic fluid specified at an airport affect how well the tilt function performs?
The tilt on a forklift is the forward-and-backward angular movement of the mast controlled by the forklift tilt cylinder, used to stabilise and position loads on the forks. The hydraulic fluid type affects tilt performance primarily through viscosity characteristics and seal behaviour: HFC water-glycol fluids can produce sluggish tilt response at low temperatures compared to mineral oil, while HFD phosphate ester provides good viscosity stability but requires complete seal conversion. Operators at high-altitude Colombian airports like El Dorado in Bogotá should account for cold-start tilt response differences when transitioning GSE forklifts from mineral oil to FRHF.
Q3. Where can a Colombian airport ground handling operator source a forklift tilt cylinder seal kit compatible with HFD phosphate ester fluid?
Colombian GSE operators needing a forklift tilt cylinder seal kit for HFD phosphate ester service should specify FKM (Viton) seal compound explicitly — not just the physical dimensions — when requesting quotes from hydraulic cylinder suppliers. Suppliers able to provide a written compatibility confirmation referencing the specific ISO 6743-4 HFD class, the FKM compound hardness and operating temperature range, and the corresponding groove dimensions ensure the seal kit will be correctly engineered for phosphate ester service rather than simply dimensionally fitting the cylinder bore and rod size.
Q4. What are the different types of forklift cylinders used in airport GSE equipment, and which require FRHF compatibility certification?
Airport GSE equipment uses three main forklift cylinder categories: the forklift hydraulic lift cylinder for vertical movement, the forklift tilt cylinder for mast angle control, and cylinders for forklift accessories driving clamp, tilt, and positioning attachment functions. In an FRHF-mandated airport zone, all three cylinder types in the affected equipment require FRHF-compatible seal packages, because they share the same hydraulic circuit and fluid. It is not sufficient to convert only the forklift tilt cylinder seals while leaving incompatible NBR or polyurethane seals in the lift cylinder or attachment auxiliary circuit.
Q5. How does forklift tilt cylinder drift develop when running incompatible hydraulic fluid on an airport cargo handling forklift?
When an incompatible FRHF type is run in a forklift tilt cylinder with standard mineral oil seals, seal swelling or degradation typically begins within weeks of the fluid exposure. As seals lose their dimensional integrity, they provide less consistent contact pressure against the bore and rod surfaces, allowing progressive internal oil bypass. Forklift tilt cylinder drift — the tendency to slowly change tilt angle under load without operator command — is an early sign of this bypass developing. In airport cargo handling, drift during ULD positioning or pallet load presentation creates alignment errors that can slow cargo processing and increase the risk of load instability incidents on the aircraft loading ramp.
Q6. What forklift hydraulic cylinder repair process applies when a GSE tilt cylinder has been contaminated by the wrong FRHF type?
Forklift hydraulic cylinder repair after FRHF contamination with an incompatible seal compound begins with draining and thoroughly flushing the cylinder and the wider hydraulic circuit — since residual incompatible fluid in the circuit hoses and manifolds will continue attacking new seals if not fully removed. The cylinder must be disassembled, seals inspected for swelling, extrusion, or degradation, and the bore and rod checked for surface damage caused by seal fragment scoring. A forklift tilt cylinder seal replacement using the correct FRHF-compatible compound follows full circuit flush and confirmation that the new fluid charge is the correct ISO 6743-4 class throughout the complete hydraulic system.
Q7. What is the difference between lift cylinder and tilt cylinder FRHF compatibility requirements in a cargo forklift fleet at a Colombian airport?
The fundamental difference between lift cylinder and tilt cylinder FRHF compatibility in the same forklift is positional rather than chemical — both cylinders in the same machine share the same hydraulic fluid, so they require identically compatible seal and material specifications. This makes the forklift tilt cylinder seal kit specification inseparable from the lift cylinder specification. The practical difference is that the forklift tilt cylinder is typically more exposed externally, with a longer accessible rod section and external hardware that may include zinc-plated bolts or brackets. These external elements require attention in HFA and HFC fluid conversions even though the internal cylinder sealing chemistry is the same for both cylinder types.
Q8. How should a Colombian ground handling company evaluate the cost of converting its existing cargo forklift tilt cylinder fleet to FRHF service?
We do not publish pricing on this page, but the cost evaluation for FRHF conversion of a cargo forklift tilt cylinder fleet should include: the unit seal replacement cost for each cylinder multiplied by fleet size; circuit flush and refill cost including labour and fluid disposal; potential external hardware replacement for HFA/HFC zinc-incompatible components; and the downtime cost of converting each GSE unit during the active flight schedule. The cost of an unmanaged incompatible fluid exposure — including emergency breakdown during peak cargo operations and the investigation and documentation obligations it triggers under AEROCIVIL and IATA audit requirements — typically exceeds the planned conversion cost by a significant margin.
Q9. Which FRHF type is most commonly specified for cargo forklift tilt cylinder service at major Colombian international airports?
The specific FRHF type for forklift tilt cylinder service varies by airport, airline ground handling contract, and specific zone designation within each airport, and we recommend confirming the requirement directly with the airport authority or handling agent at each Colombian airport where GSE equipment will be deployed. HFC water-glycol fluid is among the most widely encountered FRHF types in cargo forklift applications globally, but HFD phosphate ester use is growing in hangar and maintenance environments where the superior lubricity and viscosity stability of this fluid class offsets the more complex seal and material management requirements it imposes on forklift tilt cylinder maintenance programs.
Q10. How can a Colombian airport GSE operator request a quote for FRHF-compatible forklift tilt cylinder equipment for airside cargo handling?
To request a quote for FRHF-compatible forklift tilt cylinder equipment for Colombian airport GSE application, provide the forklift make, model, and existing OEM cylinder specifications where available, along with the ISO 6743-4 class of the fire-resistant hydraulic fluid specified at your airport (HFA, HFB, HFC, or HFD). This allows our engineering team to confirm the correct seal compound, hardware specifications, and external coating for the specific FRHF type, provide a compatibility confirmation document for your GSE maintenance records, and quote lead times suitable for coordinated fleet conversion scheduling with your cargo handling operation.

Editor: PXY