Replacement hydraulic pressure switches for industrial trash compactors — cycle pressure switches, over-pressure cutoffs, and limit-pressure sensors. OEM-compatible with Marathon, PTR, Wastequip, Harmony, and SP Industries.
Pressure switches turn hydraulic pressure into electrical signals. In a trash compactor, they do three jobs: they signal when the ram has reached the compaction pressure threshold (so the cycle can complete), they cut the system off if pressure exceeds the safe maximum (over-pressure protection), and they confirm the hydraulic system is pressurized before the cycle begins.
PRT stocks pressure switches with adjustable trip points across the range used in commercial compactor applications — typically 1,500 to 3,500 PSI. Both diaphragm-actuated and piston-actuated styles are available, with standard NPT thread fittings.
Match the switch by its pressure range (set point and adjustment range), its electrical rating, and its hydraulic fitting (typically 1/4 inch NPT). The OEM part number translates directly to a PRT replacement.
If you're replacing a switch with a new set-point requirement (e.g., upgrading to higher compaction pressure), confirm the rest of the hydraulic system can handle the new pressure before adjusting the switch.
Most stationary compactors operate at 2,000-2,500 PSI compaction pressure. Self-contained compactors and heavy-duty industrial units run 2,500-3,000 PSI. Over-pressure cutoffs are typically set 10-15% above operating pressure.
Most pressure switches have a setscrew on top for trip-point adjustment. Use a calibrated gauge to verify the switch trips at the desired pressure. Lock the setscrew after adjustment.
Form factor and NPT fittings are usually standardized; trip-point ranges differ by application. Provide the OEM part number and we'll match electrical and pressure specs.
Two symptoms: the compactor cycles incompletely (doesn't reach compaction pressure before stopping) or the over-pressure cutoff trips prematurely. Use a hydraulic pressure gauge to measure actual system pressure and compare to the switch's reading.