Hitachi High Pressure Sensor 4436271 / 4703324 / 4355012 – The “Black Box” That Predicts Pump Failure (18mm, 3-Pin, 67.5mm)

Product Description:

Applicable Model EX200-2, EX200-3, EX200-5
Part Number 4436271 4703324 4355012
Name Pressure Sensor
Part Number (Duplicate) 4436271 4703324 4355012
Item Package Quantity 1
Batteries Included? No

Note: The application information provided is for reference only. Please confirm the part number and compare it with the old component before purchasing. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us.
It is worth choosing a product that features stable performance, high reliability, easy installation, and quick response.

Category

Description

Product Video

1. Your Sensor Is a Data Logger – Use It to Predict Main Pump Failure

Most owners treat the high pressure sensor (4436271 series) as a simple replacement part: it breaks, you change it. But on EX200-2/3/5, this sensor records every pressure spike inside the main pump. By monitoring its output over time, you can spot pump wear months before a catastrophic failure.

Pressure Pattern on Monitor What It Means Action
Pressure ripple increases (normal: 5–10 bar variation → now: 20–30 bar) Pump pistons or slippers wearing unevenly Schedule pump overhaul within 500 hours
Peak pressure drops (should reach 320 bar → now max 280 bar) Internal leakage past piston seals Replace pump soon – loss of digging power
Pressure “spikes” at idle (sensor shows sudden 50–100 bar jumps when levers are neutral) Sensor failing OR pump control valve sticking Test sensor first; if good, clean pump regulator
Pressure slowly rises with engine off (key off, sensor reads 10 bar after 1 hour) Sensor internal leak (oil wicking) – will eventually short ECU Replace sensor immediately

You don’t need special tools – just look at the pressure reading on the dashboard monitor while operating. A healthy pump + good sensor = smooth, predictable pressure changes.

2. The Sensor as an Early Warning for Contaminated Oil

Hydraulic oil contamination is the #1 killer of main pumps. The high pressure sensor can alert you to contamination before the pump fails – if you know what to watch for.

Contaminant Type Effect on Sensor Reading What’s Actually Happening
Fine silt (<10 microns) No direct effect on sensor Pump wears slowly – you won’t know until performance drops
Abrasive particles (sand, metal dust) Pressure becomes erratic – small “glitches” in the monitor reading Particles are wearing piston bores. Check oil sample immediately.
Water in oil Sensor may read intermittently high (water shorting the 5V supply) Water destroys pump bearings. Change oil and seals.
Air (foaming oil) Pressure reading drops suddenly when you hear pump cavitation Low oil level or bad suction line. Fix before pump runs dry.

If you see any of these patterns, do not blame the sensor first. Test the sensor (see Section 3) – if it’s good, the problem is in your oil or pump. A new sensor will not fix contaminated oil.

3. The “Five-Minute Sensor Health Check” – No Multimeter Required

You can assess both the sensor and the pump together with a simple sequence:

Step Action Good Result Bad Result (Sensor) Bad Result (Pump)
1 Key on, engine off. Read pressure on monitor. 0–2 bar >10 bar (sensor stuck) N/A
2 Start engine, idle, levers neutral. 5–15 bar (standby pressure) Fluctuates wildly Pressure normal but pump noisy
3 Full boom lift (stall against ground). Pressure climbs smoothly to 300–350 bar Pressure jumps, drops, or stuck Pressure low (<250 bar) even with good sensor
4 Release lever quickly. Pressure drops to standby within 1 second Drops slowly (sensor slow response) Drops slowly (pump control valve sticky)

If the sensor passes all steps, replace no parts – the pump itself likely has an issue.

4. Real Case – A Sensor Saved a $6,000 Pump

A mining contractor in Ghana had an EX200-5. The operator noticed the pressure reading on the monitor would sometimes “glitch” – jump from 200 bar to 350 bar and back in a split second. The machine still dug fine.

Most mechanics would ignore this. We advised them to send an oil sample. The lab report showed high iron and copper – the pump pistons were shedding metal. The glitching sensor was simply reporting the pressure spikes caused by worn pistons catching in their bores.

They proactively replaced the pump (rebuilt unit) during scheduled downtime – cost $5,000. Had they waited, the pump would have exploded, scattering metal through the whole hydraulic system. Total repair would have exceeded $12,000.

The sensor didn’t fail – it reported the truth. They listened, and saved $7,000.

5. When to Replace the Sensor (Even If It Tests Good)

The 4436271 series has a typical lifespan of 8,000–10,000 hours. Replace it preventatively if:

Condition Reason
Over 8,000 hours on the machine The strain gauge adhesive degrades with heat cycles
You are doing a main pump overhaul A new pump deserves a new sensor – don’t trust an old one
Machine has been overheated (hydraulic oil >100°C) High heat damages the sensor’s internal electronics
You see oil residue inside the connector (even a smear) Internal diaphragm is failing – oil will soon reach the ECU

Cost of proactive replacement: < $150.
**Cost of reactive replacement after it fails and possibly damages the ECU:** $150 for sensor + $1,500 for ECU repair.

6. Installation – Protecting the ECU from Oil Creep

The 4436271 is a three-pin active sensor with a copper sealing washer. The most common installation mistake is not the torque – it’s the connector orientation.

Correct Incorrect
Connector pointing upward or horizontally Connector pointing downward
Why? Any oil leak will drip away from the connector. Oil pools in the connector and wicks into the harness – reaching the ECU.

If the mounting boss forces the connector downward (poor design), apply a small amount of dielectric grease inside the connector and use a heat shrink boot over the joint. This slows oil wicking.

Torque specification: 30–35 Nm. Do not reuse the copper washer – it work-hardens and will not seal again. A new washer is included.

7. Product Contents – Genuine Hitachi

Item Included
High pressure sensor (4436271 / 4703324 / 4355012) ✅ (Japan)
Copper sealing washer ✅ (new, pre-installed)
Protective cap (threads)
Paper box with part number label
(Optional) 3-pin pigtail harness Upon request (for corroded connectors)

Not included: Dielectric grease, heat shrink.

8. Ordering & Delivery

Item Detail
MOQ 1 piece
Lead time 6–8 working days
Packaging Paper box + bubble wrap
Payment T/T, XTransfer, PayPal, Western Union
Supply capacity 300 pcs/month
Warranty 6 months (manufacturing defects)

Can't Find a Part? Need It Shipped Today? Ask Us Now.

Share your model or serial number below for a firm quote, often with same-day dispatch.