ISO 32 vs ISO 46 Hydraulic Oil | Which Grade Do You Actually Need?
ISO 32 is thinner. ISO 46 is thicker. For most floor jacks and light hydraulic tools, ISO 32 is the right call. Industrial hydraulics and equipment running in warmer environments generally call for ISO 46. That's the short answer — here's how to know which one applies to your equipment.
ISO 32 (thinner): Floor jacks, hand pumps, light hydraulic tools, cold-climate equipment, fast-cycling systems.
ISO 46 (thicker): Industrial hydraulic systems, mobile equipment, warmer operating environments, systems running sustained high loads.
When the equipment manufacturer specifies a grade — use that grade. Don't guess, don't substitute.
What ISO Viscosity Grades Actually Mean
ISO VG stands for International Standards Organization Viscosity Grade. The number is a measure of the oil's kinematic viscosity in centistokes (cSt) at 40°C — that's the temperature where hydraulic oil is evaluated for classification purposes. A higher number means thicker oil at that temperature.
ISO VG grades follow a defined sequence: 22, 32, 46, 68, 100, and so on. Each grade has a midpoint viscosity with a ±10% tolerance band around it. ISO 32 is centered at 32 cSt at 40°C. ISO 46 is centered at 46 cSt at 40°C. That 44% difference in viscosity is what determines where each grade belongs.
Viscosity matters in hydraulics because it affects film strength, pump efficiency, internal leakage, and heat generation. Too thin, and you get increased internal leakage and poor film support under load. Too thick, and the pump works harder, temperatures climb, and efficiency drops — especially in cold starts.
ISO 32 vs ISO 46 — Side by Side
| Property | ISO 32 | ISO 46 |
|---|---|---|
| Viscosity at 40°C | ~32 cSt | ~46 cSt |
| Viscosity at 100°C | ~5.4–5.8 cSt | ~6.8–7.2 cSt |
| Relative thickness | Thinner | Thicker |
| Cold-weather flow | Better | Adequate in moderate cold |
| Film strength at load | Adequate for light duty | Better for sustained high loads |
| Typical applications | Floor jacks, hand pumps, light hydraulic tools, cold-climate equipment | Industrial hydraulic presses, mobile equipment, log splitters, lift equipment |
| Operating temp range | Better in colder climates and lower-temp systems | Better suited to warmer ambient conditions and higher system temps |
| Pump efficiency | Slightly more efficient at lower temps | Better at sustained operating temperatures |
When to Use ISO 32 vs ISO 46
ISO 32
- Floor jacks and bottle jacks (most specify ISO 32 or AW 32 directly)
- Hand-operated hydraulic pumps and shop presses rated under 10 tons
- Equipment operating in cold climates where winter startups are common
- Fast-cycling systems where quick oil flow is required
- Light-duty hydraulic tools — hydraulic pullers, hose crimpers
- Equipment where the manufacturer explicitly specifies ISO 32 or AW 32
ISO 46
- Industrial hydraulic systems — presses, injection molding, CNC equipment
- Log splitters and wood processing equipment running sustained cycles
- Mobile equipment in warm to hot climates — excavators, skid steers, lifts
- High-pressure systems where increased film strength matters
- Agricultural equipment with hydraulic implements
- Equipment where the manufacturer explicitly specifies ISO 46 or AW 46
Can You Mix ISO 32 and ISO 46?
Mixing the two won't cause an immediate chemical reaction or destroy the system. If both products use the same base oil type and additive chemistry, the blend will simply perform at some viscosity between the two grades — somewhere around ISO 38–40 depending on the ratio.
That's the problem. You've now got a fluid that doesn't meet either grade specification. If your equipment calls for ISO 32, you've built in higher internal leakage risk and slower flow response. If it calls for ISO 46, you've reduced the film strength and load-carrying capacity the system was designed around.
The correct approach: drain, flush if the system has been run for a while on the wrong fluid, and fill to the manufacturer's specification. Don't top up with whatever's on the shelf.
AMSOIL Hydraulic Oil — ISO 32 and ISO 46 Options
AMSOIL manufactures three hydraulic oil product lines, each available in both ISO 32 and ISO 46. The right choice depends on the application — anti-wear for general use, multi-viscosity for wide temperature swings, commercial-grade for industrial and fleet applications.
Synthetic Anti-Wear Hydraulic Oil
Full synthetic formulation built for high-pressure, high-load hydraulic systems. Strong anti-wear protection, thermal stability, and oxidation resistance for demanding service.
Synthetic Multi-Viscosity Hydraulic Oil
Year-round protection across a wide temperature range. A practical choice for equipment that sees both cold starts and high operating temperatures in the same service cycle.
Commercial-Grade Hydraulic Oil
Formulated for industrial and mobile hydraulic applications. Resists oxidation, fights corrosion, and inhibits foam formation to maintain component cleanliness and efficient operation.
Synthetic Biodegradable Hydraulic Oil
For mobile and stationary applications where environmental compliance matters — forestry, near water, or anywhere fluid leaks would be a regulatory concern.
Frequently Asked Questions
Bottom Line
ISO 32 is the right grade for most floor jacks, light tools, and equipment designed for colder operating conditions. ISO 46 belongs in industrial hydraulics, mobile equipment in warmer environments, and any system where sustained high loads are the norm.
The fastest way to get this right is to pull the equipment manual and match the manufacturer's specification exactly. If the manual is gone, check the rating plate on the pump or cylinder — hydraulic equipment is often marked. When in doubt, ISO 46 is the more conservative choice for industrial systems; ISO 32 is the conservative choice for light shop equipment.
For more on hydraulic jack fluid specifically, see the full guide on what oil goes in a hydraulic jack and the differences between jack oil grades.