Fire-Resistant Hydraulic Fluid for Food Production: Where UCON™ TRIDENT ™ AW Fits

Hydraulic fluid fires are not just a metalworking problem

Food plants are full of equipment that quietly depends on hydraulics: presses, lifts, dumpers, forming equipment, packaging equipment, conveyors, palletizers, doors, and utility systems. Most of the time, hydraulic fluid is invisible in the operation. It becomes visible only when something leaks, sticks, overheats, or catches the attention of maintenance after a near miss.

That is why the fluid choice matters. In a food production facility, a hydraulic leak is rarely just a leak. If the system operates near ovens, fryers, cookers, dryers, steam lines, electric heaters, motors, or other hot surfaces, a pressurized release can atomize into a spray. That spray behaves very differently from a puddle on the floor. It can travel, find an ignition source, and turn a maintenance issue into a safety, downtime, and asset-protection problem.

UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW hydraulic fluids from Dow are designed for demanding industrial hydraulic systems that need more than standard mineral oil performance. For food production teams, the practical value is straightforward: fire resistance, anti-wear protection, water solubility, clean operation, and strong performance over a wide operating temperature range.
 

Where fire resistance matters in food production

Food manufacturing happens in more than one type of environment. A beverage bottling room, a bakery oven line, a protein processing facility, a snack plant, and a confectionery operation all have different hydraulic risks. The common thread is that many food plants run high-throughput equipment for long hours, often in areas where heat, water, cleaning routines, and production pressure all overlap.

Fire-resistant hydraulic fluid becomes especially relevant when hydraulic power is used near heat or ignition sources. Examples include hydraulic lift tables near ovens, forming or pressing equipment near heated process zones, packaging machinery near heated seals, hydraulic systems in utility areas, and equipment where a hose, fitting, or seal failure could create an atomized spray. In these applications, the goal is not only to lubricate the system but also to reduce the chance that a hydraulic fluid release becomes a bigger event.

This is also why a purely commodity view of hydraulic oil can be risky. A lower-cost fluid may look acceptable on a purchase order, but the real cost shows up when it contributes to varnish, valve sticking, pump wear, cleanup complexity, or an avoidable fire-risk conversation with EHS, insurance, or plant leadership.

Why UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW is different from
conventional hydraulic oil

UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW is based on polyalkylene glycol chemistry, commonly shortened to PAG. That chemistry matters because the fluid behaves differently from petroleum-based hydraulic oil in several ways that are useful for industrial processing environments.

First, UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW is fire resistant, with high flash and fire points. UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW 46 and AW 68 are FM-approved industrial fluids under FM test standard 6930, which gives maintenance and safety teams a recognized way to evaluate fire-resistant fluid performance. For food plants that already manage thermal hazards, ignition control, housekeeping, and asset protection, that approval can help move the conversation from opinion to risk-based selection.

Second, UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW is formulated for anti-wear performance. Dow’s technical data describe the fluids as anti-wear hydraulic fluids based on ASTM D7043 vane pump testing and FZG testing. In plain English, this is not just a safer fluid that gives up the job hydraulics still need to do. It is built to help protect pumps, valves, and hydraulic components from wear under demanding operating conditions.

Third, the fluid is water soluble. That can matter in washdown-adjacent production areas and support spaces because cleanup is different from that with conventional oil-based hydraulic fluids. Water solubility does not eliminate the need for proper spill response, waste handling, or sanitation review, but it can make the maintenance conversation much more practical than dealing with a persistent oil sheen.

Fourth, UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW is designed for clean, long-lasting operation. The product is described as resistant to sludge and varnish formation when proper fluid and equipment maintenance procedures are followed. That is a meaningful point for food plants because hydraulic problems often show up as slow, annoying reliability losses before they become obvious failures: sticky valves, sluggish response, overheating, filter problems, pump wear, and inconsistent machine movement.

Technical performance points that matter to
food plant maintenance teams


Good-fit food production applications

UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW is most relevant when the hydraulic system is industrial, high-value, or exposed to conditions where fire resistance and system cleanliness matter more than simply buying a standard AW hydraulic oil.
 

  • Hydraulic equipment near ovens, dryers, fryers, cookers, heaters, or other hot surfaces
  • Packaging, forming, pressing, lifting, or conveying equipment where hydraulic leaks could contact ignition sources
  • Utility and support systems where fire resistance, long service life, and water solubility are useful selection criteria
  • Plants looking to replace petroleum-based hydraulic oils in selected higher-risk systems
  • Operations that want anti-wear performance without zinc or other metal additives
  • Facilities where maintenance teams are dealing with varnish, sludge, sticky valves, or cleanup complexity from conventional fluids


Food contact requirements—verify before specifying

In food and beverage manufacturing, some hydraulic systems sit in or near food contact zones where NSF H1, FDA 21 CFR 178.3570, or facility-specific requirements may apply. Other hydraulic systems support processing equipment, material handling, utilities, or maintenance infrastructure where there is no reasonable expectation of incidental food contact. Those are different selection conversations.

UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW should be evaluated against the specific equipment location, operating conditions, potential contact risk, and facility standards before use. If the application requires an H1-registered hydraulic fluid, confirm the appropriate product with ChemPoint and Dow before specifying or converting the system. This is exactly the kind of detail that should be checked before a plant swaps fluids, not discovered after procurement has already placed the order. 

Conversion is a technical project, not just a drum swap

Changing hydraulic fluids should be treated like a controlled maintenance project. That is especially true when converting from petroleum-based hydraulic oil to a PAG-based fire-resistant fluid. The system needs to be clean, compatible, and monitored after start-up.

Before converting, maintenance teams should confirm viscosity grade, operating temperature, pump type, seal and elastomer compatibility, filter condition, paint and plastic compatibility, reservoir design, and whether the old fluid needs to be flushed from the system. Dow’s guidance for UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW conversion emphasizes draining the previous fluid, replacing filters, circulating UCON™ TRIDENT™ fluid under minimum load, draining while warm, inspecting filters, refilling with fresh fluid, and monitoring the system during operation.

That may sound more involved than a standard top-off, because it is. But in high-risk food production environments, the point is not to make fluid selection casual but to make it controlled, documented, and aligned with the equipment, EHS, and production teams who own the risk.

Questions to ask before choosing UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW

  • Where is the hydraulic system located relative to heat, ignition sources, and food contact zones?
  • What viscosity grade does the OEM recommend at the system operating temperature?
  • s NSF H1 or another incidental food contact requirement mandatory for this equipment?
  • Are current hydraulic issues related to wear, varnish, sludge, sticky valves, overheating, or cleanup difficulty?
  • What seals, gaskets, hoses, coatings, paints, and plastics are present in the system?
  • Can the plant schedule a controlled drain, flush, filter change, refill, and start-up inspection?
  • Who needs to approve the change: maintenance, EHS, food safety, quality, procurement, insurance, or plant engineering?

The bottom line

Food production teams do not choose hydraulic fluid in a vacuum. They choose it inside real plants, around real equipment, with production schedules, safety expectations, food contact requirements, insurance scrutiny, and downtime pressure all pulling at the same time.

UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW makes sense when the problem is bigger than basic lubrication. It is a strong fit for food production environments where maintenance and engineering teams need fire-resistant hydraulic performance, anti-wear protection, cleaner operation, and practical cleanup characteristics in demanding industrial systems.

The next step is to make an educated choice. Share the equipment type, current fluid, viscosity requirement, operating temperature, location in the plant, and food contact requirements with ChemPoint. From there, ChemPoint can help confirm whether UCON™ TRIDENT™ AW is the right fit, which viscosity grade makes sense, and what the conversion plan should look like.

Want to Learn More?

Talk to a ChemPoint specialist about selecting a fire-resistant hydraulic fluid for your food production equipment.

 

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