Designed for mobile and industrial hydraulic circuits, the Vickers FR5-8-F-0-0.48 is a fixed pressure compensated flow regulator from the Vickers by Danfoss/Eaton FR5-8 Series. It delivers a rated flow of 10 litres per minute and is built to handle system pressures up to 350 bar (5,000 psi), with a series capacity of up to 350 L/min (92 US gpm).
Its compact, economical construction makes it well suited to demanding mobile applications such as harvesters and refuse haulers, as well as a wide range of industrial hydraulic systems. The fixed pressure compensation style provides consistent flow regulation regardless of load-induced pressure variations, supporting reliable actuator speed control in variable-demand circuits.
SKU: 305AA00330A
Supplier Part Number (MPN): 305AA00330A
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Specifications
Alternate Part Numbers
Alternate Part NumberMINO-00900X09915
Application
Harvesters, refuse haulers, mobile and industrial applications
Brand
Danfoss – Hydraulics
Brand
Vickers
Pack Size
1.00
UOM
EA
Features
350 bar (5000 psi) & 350 L/min (92 USgpm)|Perfect balance of pressure and flow|Reliable, economical and compact
Flow Rate1
10 litre per minute
ICC
SICV Flow Control Valves
Language
English
Product Width
0.87
Special Features
None
Style
Fixed Pressure Compensated, Flow Regulator
Sub Brand
Vickers
Supplier Part Number
305AA00330A
Product Weight
0.12 lbs
Product Questions & Answers (1)
Question by: Freddie R on Feb 27, 2026, 3:15 PM
Got a harvester running a variable-load circuit and I need something that'll hold steady actuator speed no matter what the load pressure does. This a fixed compensated unit or does it need external adjustment?
Answer by: Customer Support on Mar 1, 2026, 8:25 AM
Fixed pressure compensated, so it holds your rated flow at 10 litres per minute without you touching a thing when load pressure shifts. That compensation is built in, meaning actuator speed stays consistent even as demand swings around in a variable circuit. For harvester work where load conditions change constantly, that kind of set-it-and-forget-it behavior is exactly what keeps things running smooth.