What Is PSI? Pressure Explained for Industrial & Hydraulic Systems

PSI stands for pounds per square inch. It is the standard unit of pressure measurement in U.S. industrial, hydraulic, and pneumatic systems, representing the amount of force (in pounds) applied over one square inch of surface area. 1 PSI = 1 lb of force per in².
PSI Definition & Formula
A unit of pressure equal to one pound-force applied uniformly over one square inch of area. Used as the primary pressure measurement in U.S. hydraulic, pneumatic, and industrial fluid power systems.
Pressure is defined as force divided by area. The PSI formula is:
Example: A force of 500 lb applied over 5 in² = 100 PSI. The same force over 1 in² = 500 PSI. Reducing the area concentrates the pressure.
In fluid power systems, PSI describes the pressure that a fluid (hydraulic oil, water, compressed air) exerts on the walls of the hose, fitting, or component it travels through. This is the figure printed on hose lay lines, gauge faces, and component data sheets.
PSI, PSIG, and PSIA — What Is the Difference?
You will encounter three variants of PSI in technical documentation. Understanding the distinction is essential for correctly interpreting gauge readings and system specifications:
| Term | Stands For | Reference Point | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| PSI | Pounds per square inch | Context-dependent | General pressure specification |
| PSIG | PSI gauge | Atmospheric pressure (14.696 PSI at sea level) | Industrial gauges, hydraulic systems, pneumatics |
| PSIA | PSI absolute | Perfect vacuum (0 PSI absolute) | Process engineering, thermodynamics, vacuum systems |
| PSID | PSI differential | Difference between two pressure points | Filter pressure drop, heat exchanger specs |
The relationship between the three is: PSIA = PSIG + 14.696 (at sea level). At altitude, atmospheric pressure is lower, so this value changes slightly.
PSI in Industrial & Hydraulic Applications
PSI is the governing measurement across every segment of fluid power and industrial distribution. Regardless of the equipment or industry, pressure ratings in PSI determine component selection, system design, and safety compliance.
Hydraulic Systems
Hydraulic circuits on mobile equipment (excavators, cranes, loaders) and stationary industrial machinery operate under significant pressure. The hydraulic pump generates pressure; hydraulic hose, fittings, cylinders, and valves must all be rated to handle that pressure continuously. A single undersized component creates a dangerous failure point.
Pneumatic Systems
Compressed air systems for tools, actuators, and controls typically operate at 90–150 PSI. Pneumatic hose and fittings must be rated well above the operating pressure to accommodate surge pressures and ensure long service life.
Pressure Washing
Industrial pressure washers operate from 1,000 PSI (light-duty) to 4,000+ PSI (heavy industrial). Pressure washer hose and quick-connect fittings must be rated to match the pump's maximum output pressure.
Water & Process Systems
Municipal water mains typically run at 40–80 PSI. Process water in industrial plants may range from low-pressure gravity-fed systems to high-pressure boiler and cooling applications. Water suction and discharge hose are rated accordingly.
Working Pressure vs. Burst Pressure
Two pressure ratings appear on every hydraulic hose specification. Understanding both — and the relationship between them — is fundamental to safe system design.
Per SAE J517 and ISO 1436, hydraulic hose must maintain a minimum 4:1 safety factor between working pressure and burst pressure. A hose rated at 3,000 PSI WP must have a burst pressure of at least 12,000 PSI. Never operate a hose at its burst pressure — that is the failure threshold, not an operating limit.
Working Pressure (WP)
Working pressure is the maximum continuous operating pressure the hose is approved to handle. This is the number used in system design. Your system's maximum operating pressure — including any pressure spikes — must not exceed the hose's working pressure rating.
Burst Pressure (BP)
Burst pressure is the pressure at which the hose will catastrophically fail during a single-application proof test. It is a laboratory measurement, not an operating target. The 4:1 safety factor exists to account for pressure spikes, impulse fatigue, temperature effects, and hose degradation over time.
| Working Pressure (WP) | Min. Burst Pressure (4:1) | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|
| 1,000 PSI | 4,000 PSI | Low-pressure hydraulics, water systems |
| 1,500 PSI | 6,000 PSI | Light mobile hydraulics |
| 2,000 PSI | 8,000 PSI | Medium hydraulic circuits |
| 3,000 PSI | 12,000 PSI | Standard mobile equipment hydraulics |
| 4,000 PSI | 16,000 PSI | High-performance mobile hydraulics |
| 5,000 PSI | 20,000 PSI | Industrial high-pressure systems |
| 6,000 PSI | 24,000 PSI | Ultra-high pressure specialty hose |
Working pressure and minimum burst pressure per SAE J517 4:1 safety factor requirement.
How to Read a Hydraulic Hose Pressure Rating
Hydraulic hose is specified by SAE designation, construction type, size, and pressure rating. Every piece of hydraulic hose from ARG Industrial carries a lay line — the printed stripe running the length of the hose — that contains the key specification data.
Step-by-Step: Reading a Hose Specification
Common PSI Ranges by Application
The following reference table covers typical system operating pressures across the industries ARG Industrial serves. Use these ranges as a starting point — always verify actual system pressure before specifying hose and fittings.
| Application | Typical Operating PSI | Hose Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pneumatic tools & actuators | 90 – 150 PSI | Pneumatic / air hose | Standard shop air, compressor output |
| Municipal water supply | 40 – 80 PSI | Water discharge hose | Residential and light commercial |
| Irrigation systems | 30 – 100 PSI | Agricultural / lay-flat hose | Varies by zone design pressure |
| Light-duty pressure washer | 1,000 – 2,000 PSI | Pressure washer hose | Cold water, general cleaning |
| Industrial pressure washer | 2,000 – 4,000 PSI | High-pressure washer hose | Hot or cold water, heavy-duty |
| Mobile hydraulics (loaders, excavators) | 1,500 – 3,000 PSI | Hydraulic hose SAE 100R2 | Most common mobile equipment range |
| Industrial hydraulics | 3,000 – 5,000 PSI | High-pressure hydraulic hose | Presses, injection molding, heavy industry |
| Ultra-high pressure systems | 5,000 – 10,000+ PSI | Spiral hydraulic hose | Specialty applications, always consult ARG |
| Natural gas distribution | 0.25 – 60 PSI | Fuel hose | Varies by line pressure class |
| Steam systems | 15 – 150 PSI | Steam hose | Temperature is the co-critical factor |
Typical operating pressures. Always verify actual system requirements with engineering documentation before specifying hose assemblies.
PSI to Other Pressure Units — Conversion Reference
While PSI is the standard in U.S. industry, international equipment, European specifications, and scientific documentation use alternative pressure units. The following table converts 1 PSI to each major unit and provides the conversion formula.
| Pressure Unit | 1 PSI Equals | To Convert FROM PSI | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bar | 0.0689 bar | PSI ÷ 14.5038 | European industrial, ISO specs |
| kPa (kilopascal) | 6.895 kPa | PSI × 6.89476 | SI standard, scientific documentation |
| MPa (megapascal) | 0.006895 MPa | PSI × 0.00689476 | High-pressure engineering specs |
| ATM (atmosphere) | 0.068 atm | PSI ÷ 14.696 | Atmospheric reference |
| in WC (inches water column) | 27.68 in WC | PSI × 27.6799 | HVAC, low-pressure gas systems |
| ft H₂O (feet of head) | 2.307 ft | PSI × 2.3067 | Pump head calculations |
| mmHg (millimeters mercury) | 51.71 mmHg | PSI × 51.7149 | Medical, barometric pressure |
Source: NIST — SI Units and Conversion Factors. For detailed conversion guides, see ARG's pressure conversion series.
Frequently Asked Questions
PSI stands for pounds per square inch. It is a unit of pressure representing one pound of force applied over one square inch of surface area. PSI is the primary pressure measurement standard in U.S. hydraulic, pneumatic, and industrial fluid power systems.
PSIG (PSI gauge) measures pressure relative to atmospheric pressure — it is what industrial gauges read. PSIA (PSI absolute) measures pressure relative to a perfect vacuum, including the atmospheric baseline of 14.696 PSI. Most hydraulic hose ratings and system specifications use PSIG. The relationship is: PSIA = PSIG + 14.696.
Working pressure (WP) is the maximum continuous operating pressure the hose is rated for. Burst pressure (BP) is the pressure at which the hose will fail under a single static test. Per SAE J517, hydraulic hose must maintain a minimum 4:1 safety factor: burst pressure must be at least four times the working pressure rating.
Mobile hydraulic equipment (excavators, loaders, cranes) typically operates between 1,500 and 3,000 PSI. Industrial hydraulic systems commonly run between 3,000 and 5,000 PSI. High-performance and specialty systems can exceed 5,000 PSI and require ultra-high-pressure rated hose and fittings.
To convert PSI to bar, divide the PSI value by 14.5038. For example: 3,000 PSI ÷ 14.5038 = 206.8 bar. To convert bar back to PSI, multiply bar × 14.5038. See our full PSI to Bar Conversion Guide for a complete reference chart.
Not necessarily. Higher system pressure requires hose, fittings, and components rated for that pressure — increasing cost and component complexity. The correct operating PSI is determined by the work the system must do, not by maximizing available pressure. All components in the system must be rated at or above the maximum operating pressure, including pressure spikes.
The pressure rating is printed on the hose lay line — the text that runs along the length of the hose exterior. It will include the SAE specification number, dash size (inner diameter), and working pressure in PSI and often bar. If the lay line is worn or illegible, reference the original purchase specification or contact ARG Industrial for identification assistance.