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How to Spec a Hydraulic Press: Stroke, Daylight, Tonnage, Temperature, and Platen Size 

When a new press project starts, one of the most common mistakes is treating the specification like a list of disconnected numbers. A team asks for tonnage, stroke, platen size, and temperature range, but nobody steps back and answers the bigger question first: what does this press actually need to do in production? 

That is where projects either get clearer or get expensive. 

If a hydraulic press is underspecified, the result can be part defects, tooling issues, slower production, and constant workarounds. If it is overspecified, you can end up paying for capacity, travel, or features the process does not really need. The goal is not to choose the biggest machine possible. The goal is to define the right machine for the job. 

Start With the Application 

Before talking about tonnage or daylight, define the process. 

What material is being formed, molded, compacted, laminated, or heated? What does the part look like? How large is the tooling stack? Does the application involve composites, hot forming, deep drawing, or a process that requires tight thermal control? Will the press be manually loaded, shuttle loaded, or integrated with automation? 

These details shape the rest of the press design. A press used for general compression work may prioritize force, platen area, and cycle consistency. A press used for advanced composites or high-temperature forming may need tighter control over heat, position, pressure, and data logging. 

A strong RFQ should start with: 

  • application and part description 
  • material or material family 
  • tooling dimensions 
  • cycle requirements 
  • temperature requirements 
  • operator or automation needs 
  • control and data requirements 
  • any unusual loading conditions 

Once those details are clear, the rest of the specification becomes much easier to define correctly. 

Tonnage: Define the Force the Process Needs 

Tonnage is one of the first numbers people ask for, but it should never be guessed. 

In simple terms, tonnage is the maximum force the press can apply. It affects frame design, hydraulic requirements, cylinder sizing, and overall machine strength. But the required tonnage depends on the application. Forming, molding, compacting, and hot forming do not all use the same logic. 

This is where many projects go off track. Some teams size the press too close to the minimum, leaving little room for variation, tooling changes, or durability. Others ask for the largest tonnage possible just to be safe, which can add unnecessary cost without improving performance. 

Load distribution matters too. A centered load behaves differently than a concentrated or off-center load. If that is ignored, the press may not perform the way the spec sheet suggests. 

When defining tonnage, ask: 

  • What force is needed under normal operating conditions? 
  • Is the load centered or off-center? 
  • Is a working margin needed above the baseline? 
  • Will the press run near maximum load for long periods? 

Platen Size: Think Beyond Whether the Tool Fits 

Platen size is not just about fitting the tool on paper. 

Yes, the platen must be large enough for the mold or tooling, but it also needs to allow for mounting, alignment, access, heating systems, and part removal. A press may technically fit the tooling and still be frustrating to use if there is no room for fixtures, insulation, or operator access. 

Platen size and tonnage are also connected. In many molding and clamping applications, a larger working area can increase force requirements and make pressure distribution more important. 

When reviewing platen size, ask: 

  • What is the maximum tooling footprint? 
  • How much room is needed for mounting and alignment? 
  • Are heated platens, insulation, or adapter plates part of the build? 
  • Will operators or automation need access around the tool? 

Stroke and Daylight Are Not the Same Thing 

These two terms get mixed up constantly. 

Daylight is the maximum open distance between the working surfaces when the press is open. 
Stroke is the total potential travel distance of the ram (or piston) and moving bolster during operation. 

Both matter, but they solve different problems. Daylight determines whether the tooling stack, part geometry, and extraction space physically fit inside the press. Stroke determines whether the ram can travel through the motion the process requires. 

A press can have enough force and still be impractical if the daylight is too small or the stroke is wrong. 

A practical way to size both is to map the full stack: 

  • lower tooling height 
  • upper tooling height 
  • part height or draw depth 
  • ejection or extraction needs 
  • operator or robot clearance 
  • any auxiliary hardware that takes up space 

It is also smart to include real-world removal clearance, not just the bare minimum needed on paper. 

Temperature Can Change the Entire Design 

If the process involves heated platens or any thermally driven operation, temperature is not a side note. It is a core part of the machine design. 

Heating method, operating range, response time, and temperature uniformity all affect part quality and process consistency. Depending on the application, the system may use steam, thermal oil, or electric heating. In composite or hot forming applications, uneven heat can affect repeatability, cure, and overall product quality. 

When writing the spec, define: 

  • the operating temperature range 
  • the heating method 
  • ramp-up and cool-down expectations 
  • acceptable temperature uniformity 
  • whether insulation is required 
  • whether the process needs logging or traceability 

Controls and Special Features Matter Early 

Many press specs focus too heavily on dimensions and force while leaving controls and special features vague. That can create confusion later. 

Modern hydraulic presses may need to control speed by phase, dwell at pressure, manage heating zones, store recipes, record process variables, or integrate with plant systems. Depending on the application, important special features may also include heated platens, eject systems, shuttle tables, light curtains, safety guarding, leveling systems, or automation interfaces. 

These are not minor add-ons. They affect machine design, usability, safety, and long-term performance, so they should be specified early. 

A Better Press Spec Leads to a Better Machine

The best hydraulic press specifications are not just longer, they are clearer. 

A strong RFQ should define the application, force requirements, platen dimensions, stroke, daylight, temperature needs, controls, and special features as one connected system. When those details are considered together, the result is a press that fits the process more closely and performs more reliably over time. 

If you are building out hydraulic press specifications now, start with the application first and work forward from there. 

Need help reviewing your press requirements? Contact Accudyne to discuss your application or request a quote for a custom hydraulic press system built around your production needs. 

FAQ 

What is daylight in a hydraulic press? 

Daylight is the maximum open distance between the press working surfaces when the machine is fully open. 

What is stroke in a hydraulic press? 

Stroke is the total potential travel distance of the ram (or piston) and moving bolster during operation. 

Why do temperature requirements matter? 

Temperature affects part quality, consistency, heating method selection, insulation needs, and control requirements. 

What should be included in a hydraulic press RFQ? 

A strong RFQ should include the application, material, tooling dimensions, force requirements, platen size, stroke, daylight, temperature needs, controls, and any special features. 

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