and that would be the near textbook explanation of cavitation.
Cavitation doesnt cause areation of the oil but when the 2 combine.... the areation tends to cancel out the cavitation as the oil becomes compressible..
heres a simple demo to try...
cup a strong steel rod in your hand have someone smack the other end with a large hammer... hurts yeah? well done, thats the end result of cavitation.
now do the same thing but first cup the rod in a large carwash sponge, the impact is the same but its softened.
Now try to manouver the rod, you can do so far more precisely without the sponge ( assuming the rod is long enough and heavy enough) and that follows the effect on your hydraulic system.
with the pump cavitating the oil coming out of it is still continuous oil (no bubbles) so the system will still work, with the oil getting aerated you loose accuracy in the system as the "oil" is now compressible due to the air in it, as the system pressure changes the oil bubbles shrink and grow
For my money...
Cavitation is worse than aeration because you cant see the pressure waves coming out of the pump at better than ludicrous speed that shortens the service life of joints, hoses, pipes, seals, valve spools pretty much everything thats not a nice fat chunk of unforgiving cast metal.




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