86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
afrikarra
Albaniarra
Amharikoa
arabiera
armeniarra
Azerbaijangoa
euskara
bielorrusiera
bengalera
bosniarra
bulgariera
katalana
Cebuano
Korsikera
kroaziera
Txekiar
Danimarka
holandarra
ingelesa
esperantoa
Estoniarra
Finlandiera
frantsesa
frisiera
galegoa
georgiarra
alemana
grekoa
gujaratera
Haitiko kreolera
hausa
hawaiarra
hebreera
Ezetz
Miao
hungariera
islandiera
igbo
Indonesian
irlandera
italiarra
japoniarra
javera
Kannada
kazakh
Khmer
Ruanda
Korean
kurduera
kirgizera
TB
latina
letoniera
Lituaniera
Luxenburgera
Mazedoniera
Malgashi
malaysiera
malayalamera
maltera
maoria
Marathia
Mongoliera
Myanmar
Nepaliarra
Norvegiara
Norvegiara
okzitaniera
Paxtuera
pertsiera
poloniarra
portugesa
punjabera
errumaniera
errusiera
samoarra
Eskoziako gaelikoa
serbiarra
ingelesa
Shona
Sindhia
Sinhalera
eslovakiera
Esloveniera
somaliera
gaztelania
Sundanera
Swahilia
Suediera
Tagalog
Tajik
Tamila
tatariarra
Telugu
thailandiera
turkiera
Turkmenera
Ukrainara
Urdu
uigurrera
uzbekera
Vietnamera
galesera
Laguntza
Jiddisha
Yoruba
Zulua
If you work around process piping long enough, you learn which hardware earns its keep. The stainless steel plug valve from HBYS has been one of those quiet, dependable pieces in utility, chemical, and even food plants across North China—and increasingly, exported. The model here is X43W-10P (GB), built to China’s National Standards and, to be honest, surprisingly versatile for a flanged plug valve.
The market is nudging from commodity iron valves to corrosion‑resistant stainless designs as plants push longer maintenance cycles and cleaner processes. Sleeve/seal technology, better machining, and tighter test regimes mean a modern stainless steel plug valve can hold its own against ball valves where throttling or frequent cycling is expected. Many customers say they choose plug valves for clean shutoff in mildly dirty media and easier in-line service.
| Body material | Stainless steel (≈ CF8/CF8M class; real-world use may vary by batch) |
| Size (DN) | DN50–DN400 |
| Pressure rating | PN10–PN16 (1.0–1.6 MPa) |
| Temperature range | −29 to 200 ℃ |
| Media | Water, steam, oil, nitric acid, etc. |
| Ends / Design | Flanged; GB/National Standard design |
| Origin | North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding, Hebei, China |
Materials: cast stainless body and plug, typically precision-machined; PTFE/PPL-based sleeve seats for low torque. Methods: investment casting, CNC finishing, lapped plug-to-sleeve fit, anti-blowout stem. Testing: each valve hydro-tested per GB/T 13927 and API 598; seat leakage typically reaches ISO 5208 Rate A on water. In practice, I’ve seen cycle life around 50,000–80,000 operations when media is clean and alignment is good.
Utility water headers, condensate lines, light oils, diluted nitric acid, and general chemical lines where throttling is occasional. In food and beverage (CIP systems), the smooth bore helps. A stainless steel plug valve also behaves nicely in steam branches when temperature stays below seat limits.
| Vendor | Certs | Testing | Lead time (≈) | Customization |
| HBYS (Baoding) | ISO 9001; GB compliance | GB/T 13927, API 598 | 2–5 weeks | Seats, trim, actuators |
| Importer A | Varies by lot | API 598 (documents on request) | 6–10 weeks | Limited |
| OEM B | ISO 9001, CE (some lines) | ISO 5208 | 4–8 weeks | Medium |
Options include CF8M trim for acids, PPL seats for higher temps, extended stems for insulation, gear or pneumatic actuation, NACE MR0175-compliant materials for sour service, and alternative face-to-face per GB/T 12221. It seems that most buyers ask for PTFE seats and ISO 5211 mounting pads—makes automation painless.
A northern chemical plant swapped aging iron valves on a diluted nitric acid loop (≈ 10–15%) for HBYS stainless steel plug valve units, DN150 PN16. After 14 months, seat leakage remained at ISO 5208 Rate A on water tests; torque rise was modest (≈ +12%). Operators reported fewer packing touches—small win, big morale. Not flashy, but effective.
References