MC and Marty you need to take into account the design of modern day hydraulic pumps, the gear pump by design is of the unbalanced type and fatigue will get you sooner or later every time. The failure rate is somewhat dependant upon the operating pressure. Yes they are a little more forgiving of contaminants, however you will not find a gear pump capable of higher pressures that are common today i.e. 3000 psi or above. Piston pumps are more sensitive to contamination because of the design that is employeed to manufacture them and the tighter tolerances involved. With good clean systems it is not uncommon to get 7 to 10 years or more of useful life out of a quality built piston pump, provided the oil is kept clean, dry, and not allowed to run hot. Also there is a consideration that should be given to the additive package with respect to anti-wear. However you must remember that metalurgy can not engineer out eventual fatigue, only retard the fatigue for a little while. With respect to the useful life of a piston pump, this is somewhat of an objective question. If the pump gives good service for say 3 years before failure at one facility, that facility may say that the pump performed well, however another facility may expect the pump to run indefinetly, and if it fails at 6 years say that they did not get the expected life out of it. I guess it is all based upon your perticular expectation and assumptions. Just as a note we have several different facilities across the US that are running large Oilgear "D" pumps that have ben running for between 20 and 28 years with only one failure. The systems operate at 2200 psi and a final system pressure of 3600 psi. It is a high low circut design on multi opening presses. The circut is handled by Dennison double vane pumps and the "D" pump. In answer to the final question on Martys original post, You should never expect a gear pump to last longer than a good vane or piston pump, provided fluid conditions are optimal and mantained in that condition for the system. A gear pump as I said is of the unbalanced design and although it may continue to create flow the efficiencies of the pump will decrease to a greater extent, before that of a vane or piston pump when failure starts to occur.