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Reference · fully cited
ISO 4406, and what diesel engine makers actually require
A plain, accurate guide to the ISO 4406:2021 fuel-cleanliness code — and the current cleanliness targets set by fuel, engine, generator and injection-system manufacturers. Every figure on this page is referenced at the bottom.
The code
What the three numbers mean
Each number is a range code for how many particles of at least that size sit in one millilitre of fuel. They are always reported smallest size first. The "(c)" simply means the particle counter was calibrated to the ISO 11171 reference, so a "4 µm(c)" particle means the same thing on any calibrated instrument.13
The smallest, most numerous particles counted — the biggest driver of injector and pump wear.
Mid-size particles. Historically the "5 µm" figure before the ISO 11171 calibration change.
The larger, less common but more obviously damaging particles.
The scale
Why one number is a big deal
The scale is logarithmic: each step up roughly doubles the particle count in that band, so small-looking differences in the code are large real differences in cleanliness.4 Below is the ISO 4406 range table for a single size band (particles per ml).
Full ISO 4406 range codes run from 0 to >28; each higher code doubles the count range shown above.4 Example: going from code 22 to code 12 at ≥4 µm takes the average count from roughly 30,000 down to about 30 particles per ml.6
How it's measured
From particles to a code you can trust
Count
An automatic particle counter sizes and counts particles as fluid flows through a sensing cell.
Calibrate
The counter is calibrated to ISO 11171 at least every 12 months so sizes are comparable everywhere.2
Code
Per-millilitre counts at 4, 6 and 14 µm(c) are converted into the three-number ISO 4406 code.1
This can be done on a bench sample in a lab, or continuously and inline on flowing fuel. Trendfuel takes the continuous route — streaming the live ISO 4406 code with sub-three-second latency — but the standard and the code are identical either way.
Why it matters
Modern injectors live in a microscopic world
High-pressure common-rail (HP/CR) injection — standard on Tier 4 Final generators and heavy-equipment diesels — commonly runs at 30,000 psi or more, with internal clearances of just a few microns. A Southwest Research Institute study found that particles in the 2–3 µm range are "of most concern for causing indentations and eventually catastrophic erosive wear" in HP/CR systems — particles far too small to see.6
Particle-size references per IPU Group; most-damaging size range per the SwRI HP/CR study.46
Modern requirements
What the standards and manufacturers actually ask for
Targets differ by where the fuel is measured. A fuel-supply spec is set at the dispensing nozzle; an injection-system target is set at the injector, with on-engine filtration bridging the gap. The consensus below reflects current, published guidance.
| Reference | Measured at | ISO 4406 target | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ASTM D975 (US diesel spec) | Fuel in commerce | none | Limits combined sediment + water to 500 ppm, but sets no particle-count limit — fuel can pass ASTM D975 and still be far too dirty for common-rail.6 |
| Worldwide Fuel Charter (engine & vehicle makers) | Dispensing nozzle | 18/16/13 | Recommended so that particles from transport, storage and logistics never reach the engine.5 |
| Caterpillar (SEBU6251) | Fuel dispensed into the machine | 18/16/13 | Plus 4-micron-absolute (or finer) secondary fuel filtration required on all Cat common-rail engines.7 |
| Modern HP/CR injection (Tier 4 Final) | At the injector | ≈ 12/9/6 | Roughly 64× cleaner than 18/16/13 at ≥4 µm; commonly cited by injection-equipment and engine manufacturers, delivered via on-engine filtration.68 |
This is a summary of published, widely-cited guidance and is not a substitute for a manufacturer's manual. Specific ISO 4406 targets, filtration ratings and warranty conditions vary by engine and injection-system model — always follow the applicable engine, generator or fuel-injection-equipment manufacturer's specification.
The short version
Three things worth remembering
18/16/13 is the floor, not the goal
It is the fuel-supply target at the nozzle. Every modern common-rail maker considers it a starting point, not "clean enough."56
12/9/6 is where injectors want to live
The target at the injector for high-pressure common-rail — about 64× cleaner at 4 µm.68
You can't see the problem
The particles that wreck injectors are 2–3 µm — the code, not your eyes, is the only honest measure.6
Common questions
ISO 4406 & requirements, answered.
What is the current version of ISO 4406?
What does the "(c)" in "4 µm(c)" mean?
What cleanliness do diesel engine and generator makers require?
Doesn't ASTM D975 already guarantee clean fuel?
Is a lower ISO 4406 number better?
References
Sources & citations
- ISO 4406:2021, Hydraulic fluid power — Fluids — Method for coding the level of contamination by solid particles. International Organization for Standardization. Catalogue: iso.org/standard/79716.
- ISO 11171:2022, Hydraulic fluid power — Calibration of automatic particle counters for liquids. webstore.ansi.org.
- Ayalytical Instruments, "ISO 4406" — explanation of µm(c) calibrated sizes, ISO 11171 and NIST SRM 2806 traceability. ayalytical.com/iso-4406.
- IPU Group, "ISO 4406 standard for diesel fuel" — full range-code table and 18/16/13 particle counts. ipu.co.uk.
- Worldwide Fuel Charter (vehicle & engine manufacturer associations), recommending ISO 4406 18/16/13 at the dispensing nozzle — as summarised in Construction Equipment magazine. constructionequipment.com.
- W. Moore, "The Challenging World of 12/9/6 and Fuel Cleanliness," Construction Equipment — HP/CR pressures, Southwest Research Institute 2–3 µm finding, ASTM D975 500 ppm limit, and the 12/9/6 vs 18/16/13 comparison (Donaldson). constructionequipment.com.
- Caterpillar, Cat Commercial Diesel Engine Fluids Recommendations (SEBU6251) — 18/16/13 dispensed-fuel target and 4-micron-absolute secondary filtration for common-rail engines. Caterpillar (SEBU6251).
- Bell Performance, "Diesel Fuel Filtration Considerations," corroborating the ~12/9/6 common-rail injector target. bellperformance.com.
Primary standards (ISO 4406:2021, ISO 11171:2022, ASTM D975) and manufacturer specifications are the authoritative sources; the industry articles above are cited where they summarise or apply those documents. Standards texts themselves are purchasable from ISO and ASTM.
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