86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
Aprikano
Albaniano
Amharic
Arabiko
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Basque
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Bulgarian
Catalan
Cebuano
Corsican
Croatiano
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Esperanto
Estonian
Finnish
Pransiya
Frisian
Galician
Georgian
Aleman
Griyego
Gujarati
Haitian Creole
hausa
hawaiian
Hebreohanon
dili
Miao
Hungarian
Icelandic
igbo
Indonesian
irish
Italyano
Hapon
Javanese
Kannada
kazakh
Khmer
Rwandan
Koreano
Kurdish
Kyrgyz
TB
Latin
Latviano
Lithuanian
Luxembourgish
Macedonian
Malgashi
Malay
Malayalam
Maltese
Maori
Marathi
Mongolian
Myanmar
Nepali
Norwegian
Norwegian
Occitan
Pashto
Persianhon
kahamis
Portuges
Punjabi
Romaniano
Ruso
Samoano
Scottish Gaelic
Serbiano
English
Shona
Sindhi
Sinhala
Slovak
Slovenian
Somali
Kinatsila
Sundanese
Swahili
Swedish
Tagalog
Tajik
Tamil
Tatar
Telugu
Thai
Turko
Turkmen
Ukrainiano
Urdu
Uighur
Uzbek
Vietnamese
Welsh
Tabang
Yiddish
Yoruba
Zulu
If you work around piping, you know the quiet heroes that hold pressure lines together. I’m talking about carbon steel forged flanges. To be honest, they rarely get credit—until a shutdown hinges on a gasket line and bolt circle that must be dead right. Lately I’ve been seeing tighter tolerances, cleaner machining, and faster lead times, even on 24–48 inch diameters. That’s not hype; it’s the market catching up to reliability.
This line covers WN, Slip-On, and Blind types in CS A105/SA105N (also SS304/316 for mixed-service). Many customers say the bolt-hole alignment and face finish have been impressively consistent—surprisingly so on large sizes.
| Spec | Details (≈ real-world use may vary) |
|---|---|
| Standard | ASME/ANSI B16.5; materials to ASTM A105/SA105N |
| Pressure Classes | Class 150, 300, 600, 900 |
| Size Range | 1/2"–48" |
| Types | Welding Neck, Slip-On, Blind (RF/RTJ options) |
| Coating | Black or yellow paint; rust-proof oil |
| Docs | MTC EN 10204 3.1; hardness, PMI, UT/MT reports |
Service life? In benign utilities, 20+ years isn’t unusual. In sour or cyclic service, gasket selection, bolt stress, and media corrosion dominate outcomes. That’s where carbon steel forged flanges still beat cast alternatives: fracture toughness and bolt-up reliability.
Oil & gas (midstream tie-ins), chemical plants, power-gen steam lines, desalination, HVAC chilled water, shipbuilding. For Class 300, I often see carbon steel forged flanges on medium-pressure process lines that need repeatable torque cycles during turnarounds.
A Gulf Coast midstream station swapped legacy Class 300 SO flanges for SA105N WN flanges on a dehydration skid. Result: fewer gasket weeps after thermal cycles and faster alignment during outage—maintenance crew told me bolt-up felt “more forgiving.” Not scientific, but it tracks with better machining and hub rigidity.
Origin of the featured line: North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding City, Hebei Province, China. Lead times have been, frankly, competitive.
| Vendor | Certs | Lead Time ≈ | MOQ | Customization | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HBYS (ASME B16.5 focus) | ISO 9001; MTC 3.1 | 2–5 weeks | Flexible | Bore, facing, coating | Clean machining; fair pricing |
| Importer/Stockist | Varies | In stock–2 weeks | Carton/pallet | Limited | Fast but less customization |
| Local Machine Shop | Shop-level | Days–weeks | Small | High | Great for specials; higher cost |
Wrap-up? For mid-pressure lines, carbon steel forged flanges remain the safe, economical default—especially when you need repeatable bolt-up and traceable metallurgy without drama.