86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
africain
albanais
Amharique
arabe
arménien
azerbaïdjanais
Basque
biélorusse
bengali
bosniaque
bulgare
catalan
Cebuano
Corse
croate
tchèque
danois
Néerlandais
Anglais
espéranto
estonien
finlandais
Français
frison
Galicien
géorgien
Allemand
grec
Gujarati
Créole haïtien
haoussa
hawaïen
hébreu
Non
Miao
hongrois
islandais
igbo
indonésien
irlandais
italien
Japonais
Javanais
Kannada
kazakh
Khmer
Rwandais
coréen
kurde
Kirghize
tuberculose
Latin
letton
lituanien
luxembourgeois
Macédonien
Malgashi
malais
Malayalam
maltais
Maori
Marathi
mongol
Birmanie
Népalais
norvégien
norvégien
Occitan
pachtou
persan
polonais
Portugais
Pendjabi
roumain
russe
Samoan
Gaélique écossais
serbe
Anglais
Shona
Sindhi
Cinghalais
slovaque
slovène
somali
Espagnol
Soundanais
Swahili
suédois
Tagalog
tadjik
Tamil
tatar
Télougou
thaïlandais
turc
Turkmènes
ukrainien
Ourdou
Ouïghour
Ouzbek
vietnamien
gallois
Aide
yiddish
Yorouba
zoulou
If you’ve ever had to cap a pipeline in a tight shutdown window, you know the humble Blind Flange can make or break the schedule. This one comes out of North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding, Hebei—an area that, to be honest, has quietly become an engine for Eastern European and CIS pipeline hardware. Standard is GOST 12836; pressure classes run PN6 up to PN63 (yes, PN2.5 and PN40 options are doable), and sizes DN15–DN500. I’ve walked these shops; the routine is rigorous and—surprisingly—pretty nimble.
A Blind Flange closes the line for pressure testing, isolation, or future tie-ins. Compared with temporary caps, it’s safer at higher PN ratings, easier to re-open, and—if machined right—keeps gasket stress uniform. Many customers say they like the predictable bolt stress and the fact that inspection teams accept it without fuss.
| Standard | GOST 12836; interfaces per project drawing, alignment with GOST 33259 in many builds |
| Pressure rating | PN6, PN10, PN16, PN25, PN40, PN63 (PN2.5/PN4.0 on request) |
| Size range | DN15–DN500 |
| Taper | BLIND (solid plate), raised-face or flat-face as specified |
| Materials | CS: CT20, 16Mn; SS: 304/304L, 316/316L |
| Coating | Rust‑proof oil; custom paint or zinc options available |
| Surface finish | Sealing face ≈ Ra 3.2–6.3 μm (real-world use may vary by gasket) |
| Docs & testing | EN 10204 3.1, dimensional checks, PMI (SS), UT on plate, hydro proof ≈ 1.5×PN on request |
Service life? In benign media, a carbon‑steel Blind Flange can run 20–30 years; stainless often longer, corrosion permitting.
Refining turnarounds, gas distribution headers, district heating loops, chemical isolation spools, and test packages. I guess the most common use I see is pressure testing new branches before tie-in—quick, safe, reversible.
| Vendor | Coverage | Lead time | Certs | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hebei HBYS Valves (factory) | DN15–DN500, PN6–PN63 | ≈ 10–20 days | ISO 9001, EN 10204 3.1; EAC on request | Strong on GOST machining, flexible MOQ |
| Moscow Stockist A | Common DN/PN in stock | Same-week | EAC | Fast but limited materials |
| Trading Co. B | Wide PN, mixed sourcing | ≈ 3–5 weeks | Varies | Check drawings carefully |
Non-standard thickness for high gasket stress? Spiral-wound compatibility grooves? Marking to Russian/CIS conventions? All are routine. For sour service, a 316L Blind Flange with low-ferrite control and PMI is typical.
District Heating, DN400 PN16: 16Mn Blind Flange, RF finish Ra ≈ 3.2 μm, hydro proof at 24 bar for 10 min—no seepage. Client feedback: “Bolting lined up first shot.”
Chemical Tie‑in, DN80 PN40: 316L Blind Flange for chloride media, PMI 100%, gasketed with graphite SWG. After 9 months, flange face showed negligible wear in inspection report.