86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
afrikkalainen
albanialainen
amhara
arabialainen
armenialainen
Azerbaidžani
baski
valkovenäläinen
bengali
bosnialainen
bulgarialainen
katalaani
Cebuano
Korsikalainen
Kroatia
Tšekki
Tanskan kieli
Hollannin kieli
Englanti
esperanto
Virolainen
Suomalainen
Ranskan kieli
friisi
Galicialainen
Georgian
Saksan kieli
kreikkalainen
gudžarati
Haitin kreoli
hausa
havaijilainen
heprealainen
Ei
Miao
Unkarin kieli
islantilainen
igbo
Indonesialainen
irlantilainen
italialainen
japanilainen
jaavalainen
kannada
kazakki
khmerit
Ruanda
Korealainen
kurdi
Kirgisia
TB
Latina
Latvialainen
liettualainen
luxemburgilainen
makedonialainen
Malgashi
malaiji
malajalami
maltalainen
maori
marathi
mongolialainen
Myanmar
Nepali
Norjan kieli
Norjan kieli
Oksitaani
pashto
persialainen
Kiillottaa
Portugalin kieli
Punjabi
romanialainen
Venäjän kieli
samoalainen
Skotlannin gaeli
serbia
Englanti
Shona
Sindhi
sinhala
Slovakian
slovenialainen
somali
Espanja
sundalainen
swahili
Ruotsin kieli
Tagalog
tadžiki
tamili
tatari
telugu
thaimaalainen
turkkilainen
Turkmenistan
ukrainalainen
urdu
uiguuri
uzbekki
vietnam
Walesin
auta
jiddish
joruba
zulu
If you’re shopping for a flanged plug valve for water or low-pressure steam, here’s the short version: simplicity still wins. The X43W/T-10 from HBYS Valves (origin: North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding City, Hebei Province, China) is a no-drama workhorse. I’ve seen it in municipal grids and boiler rooms where teams want quarter-turn control without babysitting seats all season. Actually, that’s more common than you’d think.
Two trends keep coming up in 2025 conversations: utilities want quarter-turn valves with lower torque and fewer gasketed leak points; and procurement teams are nervous about repair kits that take weeks. This makes the flanged plug valve—especially in cast iron for PN10/16 water and steam—feel like a safe bet. Not glamorous, but reliable. Many customers say they picked it because maintenance is predictable and installation is familiar.
| Parameter | X43W/T-10 (indicative) |
|---|---|
| Size range | DN20–DN500 |
| Pressure rating | PN10/PN16 (1.0–1.6 MPa) |
| Temperature | ≤120 ℃ (water, low-pressure steam) |
| Body material | Gray cast iron or nodular cast iron |
| Ends | Flanged; common drilling EN 1092-1 PN10/16 (confirm at PO) |
| Operation | Manual (handwheel/lever; gear for larger DN) |
Note: Face-to-face often aligns with GB/T 12221 or ASME B16.10 equivalents—real-world use may vary by batch. Always check the datasheet before finalizing isometrics.
Municipal water grids, HVAC condenser loops, district heating return lines (≤120 ℃), and low-pressure steam distribution. The flanged plug valve gives quarter-turn shutoff and good throttling for coarse control—though for fine control, operators still prefer globe valves. In wastewater, the eccentric plug variant is popular; but for clean water, this classic design is usually cheaper and easier to stock.
| Vendor | Seat style | Body | DN range | Pressure | Lead time ≈ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HBYS X43W/T-10 | Lubricated or sleeved (per order) | Gray/Nodular CI | DN20–500 | PN10/16 | 2–5 weeks |
| Flowserve XOMOX Tufline | PTFE-sleeved | CI/DI/Steel | DN15–600 | PN10–25 | 4–8 weeks |
| DeZURIK Eccentric Plug | Eccentric plug (wastewater) | DI | DN50–1200 | PN10–25 | 6–10 weeks |
Not apples to apples, to be honest—but this is how buyers shortlist. Check flange drilling, seat type, and torque before swapping across brands.
Feedback is mostly pragmatic: “it just works,” as one maintenance lead put it. I guess that’s the point.
PN16 shell test ≈ 24 bar; seat test ≈ 17.6 bar, ambient water per API 598/ISO 5208. Documentation is usually stamped and archived with the batch—ask for the test certificate and heat numbers.