86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
africano
albanés
amárico
Arábica
armenio
azerbaiyano
vasco
bielorruso
bengalí
bosnio
búlgaro
catalán
cebuano
corso
croata
checo
danés
Holandés
Inglés
esperanto
estonio
finlandés
Francés
frisio
gallego
georgiano
Alemán
Griego
gujarati
criollo haitiano
hausa
hawaiano
hebreo
No
Miao
húngaro
islandés
igbo
indonesio
irlandesa
italiano
japonés
javanés
canarés
kazajo
jemer
ruandés
coreano
kurdo
Kirguistán
tuberculosis
latín
letón
lituano
luxemburgués
macedónio
Malgashi
malayo
Malayalam
maltés
maorí
marathi
mongol
Birmania
nepalí
noruego
noruego
occitano
pastún
persa
Polaco
portugués
punjabi
rumano
ruso
samoano
gaélico escocés
serbio
Inglés
Shona
Sindhi
cingalés
eslovaco
esloveno
somalí
Español
sundanés
swahili
sueco
tagalo
tayiko
Tamil
tártaro
telugu
tailandés
turco
turcomano
ucranio
urdu
uigur
uzbeko
vietnamita
galés
Ayuda
yídish
Yoruba
zulú
I’ve stood on enough catwalks over slurry lines to know: when a plant spec says “open and shut, no drama,” a knife gate—especially the rising-stem type—earns its keep. The DN 50–600 (and up to DN900, for those pushing capacity) from Baoding, Hebei, has been popping up in RFQs lately, and not by accident.
You get a clear visual cue of valve position (stem up = open), simple mechanics, and fewer surprises in abrasive slurries. The trade-off is height; rising stems need headroom. Many customers say the visibility beats stem-protected designs when operators rotate between shifts. And honestly, that counts.
| Model | DN 50–600 mm (factory can supply up to DN900) |
| Pressure rating | PN10–PN16 (1.0–1.6 MPa) |
| Temp range | ≤ 350 °C (real-world use may vary with seat/gasket) |
| Body materials | WCB carbon steel, Stainless (304/316); gate hardfacing optional |
| Medium | Residue-water mixtures, pulp, tailings slurry, ash, wastewater |
| Ends | Flange type (“plum blossom” multi-lug pattern), EN 1092-1 compatible |
| Actuation | Manual, bevel gear, electric, pneumatic, sprocket, electro-hydraulic |
| Seat options | Metal, EPDM, NBR, PTFE (≈ pick per chemistry/temperature) |
Origin: North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding, Hebei, China. Castings are incoming-inspected (spectrometer and PMI on stainless), machined on CNC, and the gate edges are lapped for a clean shear. Assembly includes stem-nut alignment—small detail, big effect on torque—and a full hydro test.
Pulp and paper chests, mineral processing lines, FGD slurry, STP grit removal, and, surprisingly, some biogas digestate loops (with PTFE seats). Operators like the Rising Stem Knife Gate Valve on floor-level manifolds because the position is obvious from twenty paces.
| Vendor | Sizes | Lead time | Certs | Seat options | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HBYS (Baoding) | DN50–900 | ≈ 3–6 weeks | ISO 9001; PED/CE on request | Metal, EPDM, NBR, PTFE | Good customization, fair pricing ($$) |
| Vendor A (EU) | DN80–600 | ≈ 6–10 weeks | CE, ATEX | Soft seat focus | Premium build ($$$) |
| Vendor B (APAC) | DN50–700 | ≈ 4–8 weeks | ISO 9001 | Metal seat standard | Aggressive pricing ($) |
Paper mill, Southeast Asia: swapped 18 legacy units for Rising Stem Knife Gate Valve with PTFE seats; torque dropped ≈ 20% versus old gearboxes, zero leakage seen at PN16 seat test after 6 months. Iron ore concentrator: moved to duplex gate + EPDM; yes, price ticked up, but liners lasted two shutdowns instead of one. Operators liked the stem visibility—“simple, obvious” was the exact quote.
If you need a straight-talking valve for slurries and mixed-phase lines, this Rising Stem Knife Gate Valve hits the practical sweet spot: visible position, robust trim, and honest test data. To be honest, that’s what maintenance crews remember during night shifts.