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Ulka EP5 Deep Dive: Technical Analysis and Comparisons vs GW and FM Variants

Ulka EP5 Deep Dive: Technical Analysis and Comparisons vs GW and FM Variants

The ULKA “EP5” is best understood as a high‑pressure, low‑flow vibratory (electromagnetic) pump in the broader “E (high pressure)” family made by CEME S.p.A., commonly used as the pressure source in espresso and coffee equipment. 

Across EP5, “GW” variants, and “FM” variants, the big practical differences are not “can it make espresso pressure?” (most can), but (a) which electrical supply it is designed for (voltage + frequency), (b) duty cycle (how long it can be energized per minute), and (c) outlet/fitting style (where GW commonly shows up in parts catalogs as a countersunk outlet fitting). 

If you want one mental model for selection:

  • EP5 (standard) = “baseline E5 hydraulic performance” (~650 cc/min at 0 bar; curves drop toward ~0 at ~15 bar), with common mains versions (120 V/60 Hz, 220 V 50–60 Hz, 230 V/50 Hz) and a 24 V AC option. 
  • EP5GW / EX5GW (GW variants) = similar pressure class, but GW is frequently associated (in third‑party parts catalogs) with a countersunk 1/8" outlet fitting geometry—a “small detail” that becomes a “big leak” if mismatched. 
  • EP5FM / EP5FMSP (FM variants) = a related family (“EFM”) with models sold in both “FM” and “FMSP” trims. The “FMSP” versions on Hydronics Depot Inc. listings are explicitly spec’d to 16 bar max and (in 120 V) 675 cc/min max flow—slightly different from baseline EP5 listings. 

Understanding ULKA naming: EP, EX, GW, FM, SP

EP vs EX: outlet material is the first split

In the official ULKA catalogue pages hosted by CEME, EP is labeled “plastic outlet” and EX is labeled “brass outlet.” 

That simple distinction matters for two reasons that show up repeatedly in the manufacturer documentation and downstream service practice:

  1. The outlet interface is more sensitive to matching the intended seal geometry in “EP (plastic outlet)” builds. The E (high pressure) datasheet notes that for the plastic outlet fitting, the marking “G 1/8” is indicative and that sealing is governed by the sealing method (not guaranteed by the thread itself). 
  2. Brass outlet variants (EX…) are often treated by distributors as the “durability upgrade path” (more robust outlet). 

What “GW” most plausibly means in practice: outlet fitting geometry

In the CEME/ULKA “E high pressure” datasheet, “GW” appears as a legitimate model designation alongside EP/EX (e.g., EP4GW, EP5GW, EX5GW), confirming it is not just an aftermarket nickname. 

What the manufacturer sheet does not do is explicitly define GW in plain language. A reputable way to bridge that gap is to look at professional spare‑parts cataloging, where parts are differentiated by fitting form factors. In the LF Spare Parts “Vibrating pumps” mini‑catalog, EP5GW is shown with “countersunk fitting Ø 1/8” in one of its entries (while non‑GW EP5 listings are shown as standard “fittings”). 

Interpretation (engineering‑useful, but still an inference): GW is often encountered where the 1/8" outlet connection is a countersunk/taper‑seat style, so the pump must match the mating fitting/seal style used by the machine’s plumbing. This is exactly the kind of “it fits, but it leaks” incompatibility you want to catch early. 

What “FM” and “SP” mean: EFM family and a “higher‑spec” trim

CEME hosts a separate datasheet titled “Family pump EFM,” which includes EP4FMSP / EP5FMSP and EP4FMGWSP / EP5FMGWSP in its model list, and provides a distinct flow‑vs‑pressure table for EP5FM/SP. 

On Hydronics Depot’s own catalog, “FM” and “FMSP” are treated as separate purchasable variants, with different rated power/max pressure specifications (notably, EP5FMSP models are listed at 16 bar max, whereas EP5FM is listed at 15 bar max). 

ULKA Vibration Pump EP5 - BULK PACK 120V, 60Hz, 41W NSF

Key specifications and measured performance

Physical package and connectors (manufacturer-published)

For the E high pressure family, ULKA/CEME’s datasheet provides a dimensioned outline and connection types:

  • Outlet: “1/8” Gas” (G 1/8) at the delivery head. 
  • Inlet: hose barb diameter called out as Ø 7.2 mm on the drawing. 
  • Electrical: 6.3 × 0.8 mm Faston (spade) terminals. 
  • Envelope dimensions: overall height called out around 122 mm on the drawing (plus other major dims like ~54.3 mm body width). 
  • Integrated diode: indicated as integrated for the family, except for 24 V. 

For the EFM family, the EFM datasheet shows essentially the same mechanical interface class (1/8" Gas outlet, Ø 7.2 mm inlet reference, 6.3 × 0.8 mm terminals) and a very similar overall geometry (height called out ~123 mm on that sheet). 

Hydraulic performance: what “650 cc/min, 15 bar” actually looks like

Manufacturer E‑family performance is best read from the flow vs pressure table (water at 20 °C, ambient 25 °C, nominal voltage), which shows the expected drop in flow as system resistance rises:

  • E5 (baseline reference for EP5 class): ~650 cc/min at 0 bar; ~300 cc/min at 8 bar; ~210 cc/min at 10 bar; trending to ~0 at 15 bar. 

For EFM (EP5FM/SP):

  • EP5FM/SP: ~675 cc/min at 0 bar; ~300 cc/min at 8 bar; ~200 cc/min at 10 bar; ~50 cc/min at 14 bar; ~0 at 16 bar. 

The practical takeaway: at espresso‑like restrictions (roughly 8–10 bar in many brew circuits), E5 and EFM EP5 variants are in the same neighborhood, which is why outlet/fitting style and duty cycle frequently dominate real‑world selection decisions. 

Comparison table of commonly encountered EP5, GW, and FM variants

The table below consolidates manufacturer curves (for hydraulic behavior) and Hydronics Depot retail specs (for the exact variants they sell and their on‑page ratings). 

Model (as sold/marked) Voltage / frequency Power (W) Duty cycle (min on/off) Max flow (cc/min) Max pressure (bar) Notes that affect interchange
EP5 120 V / 60 Hz 41 1/1 650 15 Common North American EP5 spec; lower duty cycle than FM/FMSP variants. 
EP5 220 V / 50–60 Hz 48 2/1 650 15 Wide frequency tolerance listing; check machine mains supply. 
EP5 230 V / 50 Hz 48 2/1 650 15 Classic EU/50 Hz spec; Hydronics lists 35 °C max water temp on this SKU. 
EP5 24 V / 50–60 Hz (AC) 48 2/1 650 15 24 V option exists; manufacturer notes diode exception for 24 V in E-family. 
EP5GW 230 V / 50 Hz 48 2/1 650 15 Hydronics lists as EP5GW; parts catalogs often associate GW with “countersunk” 1/8" fitting styles—verify outlet geometry. 
EX5GW 220 V / 50–60 Hz 48 2/1 650 15 Brass outlet variant (EX = brass outlet); GW fitting considerations still apply. 
EP5FM 120 V / 60 Hz 46 2/1 650 15 “FM” variant, higher duty than 120 V EP5; Hydronics flags low stock/lead time on this SKU. 
EP5FM 230 V / 50 Hz 40 2/1 650 15 Lower‑power 230 V FM variant (distinct from FMSP). 
EP5FMSP 120 V / 60 Hz 46 2/1 675 16 Matches EFM datasheet behavior (675 cc/min @0 bar; 0 @16 bar); “SP” appears to be the higher‑spec trim. 
EP5FMSP 230 V / 50 Hz 48 2/1 650 16 Hydronics lists 16 bar max; aligns with EFM family’s higher shutoff pressure behavior. 

Applications and model-by-voltage use cases

Where EP5‑class pumps show up (manufacturer view)

CEME categorizes the E5 (main series E) “main application” as Coffee Espresso, and also lists sterilization autoclave and multi‑purpose applications. 

In the broader ULKA catalogue pages, typical applications are illustrated as:

  • coffee machines,
  • carpet cleaners / steam cleaning systems,
  • steam irons / steam stations / ironing presses,
  • medical / dental equipment,
  • water gasifying and multi‑beverage vending,
  • air conditioners,
  • smoke/fog machines. 

This makes EP5 less “an espresso pump” and more “a compact high‑pressure water metering actuator,” with espresso being the most visible use case. 

What voltage usually implies about the machine category

120 V / 60 Hz (North America, Japan some cases vary):
This is the typical mains format for US/Canada home espresso and small appliances. The key nuance is that 120V EP5 is commonly listed with a 1/1 duty cycle, while 120V FM/FMSP variants are listed at 2/1, which maps better to longer brew/flush sequences without thermal stress. 

220 V / 50–60 Hz (international “wide” mains environments):
These variants are frequently used in export‑market machines where “220 V” is specified and frequency may be 50 or 60. Hydronics explicitly sells EP5‑220V and EX5GW‑220V rated for 50–60 Hz. 

230 V / 50 Hz (EU/UK and many regions):
This is the canonical EP5 and EP5GW landscape for European equipment and many super‑automatic platforms. Hydronics’ EP5GW page also cross‑references several OEM ecosystems (including parts used in machines from De'Longhi and others) via compatibility numbers, indicating common field replacement usage. 

24 V / 50–60 Hz (AC):
A 24 V pump strongly suggests a machine with an internal transformer/low‑voltage control architecture (often vending/industrial or tightly controlled appliances). Hydronics sells an EP5‑24V model and the manufacturer family table explicitly includes a 24 V line with 2/1 duty and notes the integrated‑diode exception for 24 V. 

Short decision guide by scenario

If you’re matching an existing pump in an appliance (most common):
Start by copying the exact electrical line (voltage + Hz) and the model suffix off the label (EP5 vs EP5GW vs EP5FMSP, etc.). Hydronics Depot Inc emphasizes that pumps should not be mixed/matched and that voltage/frequency must be correct. 

If you’re designing/retrofitting (hobbyist/engineering):

  • Choose EP5FMSP when you want EP5‑class form factor with a spec’d higher shutoff (16 bar) and slightly higher open‑flow (675 cc/min in 120 V listings) for aggressive priming/flush behavior and headroom. 
  • Choose EP5FM (non‑SP) when you need 2/1 duty but lower absorbed power at 230 V (40 W listing) while staying in the same mechanical class. 
  • Choose EX5GW when you want a brass outlet build (EX) and your machine expects GW‑style fittings; this is often the conservative reliability pick when the outlet is stressed or repeatedly serviced. 
  • Choose EP5GW specifically when your machine’s plumbing expects the GW outlet geometry (commonly “countersunk” in parts catalogs) and you want to avoid adapters. 

Compatibility and interchangeability: what actually swaps and what can bite you

Electrical compatibility: voltage, Hz, and duty cycle are “hard constraints”

  • CEME’s E5 product page lists a standard voltage (230 V 50 Hz) and other available voltages (including 24 V 50 Hz, 110 V 60 Hz, 220 V 60 Hz, 100 V 50/60 Hz), reinforcing that the same hydraulic platform is produced in many electrical configurations. 
  • Hydronics Depot Inc product pages repeatedly warn to select the correct voltage and frequency and not to mix/match. 
  • Duty cycle differences are not cosmetic: e.g., EP5 120 V is listed 1/1, while EP5FM and EP5FMSP 120 V are listed 2/1. 

Rule: If you change voltage, frequency, or duty class, treat it as an engineering change requiring thermal and control validation, not a “drop‑in.” 

Hydraulic/mechanical compatibility: “same family” still isn’t always “same fitting”

What usually is consistent across E‑family and EFM family:

  • Form factor and overall envelope (roughly ~122–123 mm tall class). 
  • Electrical terminals: 6.3 × 0.8 mm spades. 
  • Outlet is specified as “1/8 Gas” on manufacturer drawings. 

What can differ in ways that matter:

  • Outlet sealing geometry on plastic outlet variants (EP…) is explicitly called out as sealing‑dependent rather than thread‑guaranteed in the manufacturer datasheets. 
  • “GW” fitting style: service catalogs (LF) differentiate “countersunk fitting Ø 1/8” on EP5GW entries and also show “1/8 countersunk” versions for EX5. 

Practical rule: If your existing pump is “GW,” do not assume a non‑GW pump will seal correctly without changing the mating fitting/valve stack. Conversely, if your machine expects standard flat‑seal, a countersunk outlet can create leaks or damage seals when tightened. 

EP5 vs EP5GW vs EP5FM vs EP5FMSP: interchange summary

  • EP5 ↔ EP5GW: likely close in hydraulic rating (same 15‑bar class on Hydronics listings), but GW variants are the ones to double‑check for outlet fitting geometry in the machine’s plumbing. 
  • EP5 ↔ EP5FM: on 120 V, EP5FM offers higher duty (2/1) and slightly higher power (46 W vs 41 W) than EP5; mechanically similar class, but verify machine control expectations and any integral valve stack. 
  • EP5FM ↔ EP5FMSP: FMSP is the “higher headroom” flavor sold with 16‑bar max specs and (in 120 V) 675 cc/min max flow on Hydronics listings, and it matches the EFM datasheet’s EP5FM/SP curve. 
  • EP5GW ↔ EX5GW: EX indicates brass outlet vs EP plastic outlet; if you are swapping EP→EX, treat it as a material/interface change (often beneficial for robustness), but keep the GW fitting style consistent if the machine plumbing expects it. 

Ulka Vibration Pump EP5FMSP-120V, 60Hz, 46W NSF

Reliability, failure modes, and maintenance tips

Operating limits the manufacturer is explicit about

Across catalogue/datasheets, the repeated constraints are:

  • Self‑priming is supported at 0 bar, but these pumps are not suitable for dry running except during priming. 
  • Manufacturer literature frames water as the ideal fluid and shows performance curves measured with water at ~20 °C. 

Practical implication: many real “pump failures” begin as priming failures (air locks) or mineral/debris interference at the check‑valve elements, not immediate coil death. 

Common failure modes in the field (symptoms → likely causes)

Pump runs loudly but no water moves (classic air lock / dry pump behavior):
A detailed support guide from Clive Coffee describes how a vibratory pump can run loudly while failing to draw water after running dry or forming an air bubble, and recommends short on/off pulses rather than extended dry running. 

Noisy pump complaints (buzzing/rattling/knocking):
A troubleshooting article from Caffewerks lists common causes of loud pump noise including air in lines, scale buildup, worn/damaged components, pump vibration due to mounting, and pressure/flow restrictions (e.g., blocked screens). 

Weak pressure / low flow over time:
While individual machines vary, the same Caffewerks write‑up ties loudness and poor performance to scale and restriction‑related backpressure, which is consistent with the manufacturer’s steep flow drop as pressure rises (small restrictions can materially change delivered flow). 

How to Repair an Ulka Pump? Need to Repair an Ulka Pump?

Another critical warning: do not attempt to repair Ulka Pumps. These pumps are not designed to be rebuilt or refurbished. Here’s why:

  • Fire Hazards: Opening or tampering with electrical components can create short circuits and increase the risk of fire.

  • Leak Hazards: Improper sealing after “repairs” can cause leaks, leading to water damage, electrical failure, or machine contamination.

  • Machine Damage: A poorly reassembled pump can fail catastrophically, damaging expensive espresso machines, autoclaves, or other equipment.

Ulka Pumps are disposable units. They must be replaced with a brand new one, not patched up with any other components. There are no repair or maintenance kits for these pumps. New pumps are:

  • Factory-tested and calibrated

  • Equipped with distilled water

  • Precisely tuned to work with other components in a machine such as pressure relief valves, check valves, internal control panels, pressure switches for vacuuming, and proper discharge systems

When you install a new Ulka Pump, you’re installing a component that’s engineered for safety, performance, and reliability, something a “repaired” pump can never guarantee.

The Only Safe Place to Buy Ulka Pumps: Hydronics Depot Inc.

There’s only one place you should ever buy Ulka Pumps: Hydronics Depot Inc. Here’s why:

  • Direct From Italy: Every Ulka pump we sell is sourced straight from the original Italian factory.

  • Factory-Sealed, Never Used: We guarantee pumps are 100% new and never reshipped.

  • Certified & Traceable: Proper OEM certifications (UL, NSF, CE, etc.) included.

  • Trusted Distributor: We are the authorized global distributor for Ulka Pumps.

  • Global Shipping: We deliver genuine Ulka Pumps worldwide.

Next article PROCON Pumps: Applications, Industries, Glycol Use, & Certifications

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