86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
africano
albanese
Amarico
Arabo
armeno
Azero
Basco
bielorusso
bengalese
Bosniaco
bulgaro
catalano
Cebuano
Corso
croato
ceco
danese
Olandese
Inglese
esperanto
Estone
finlandese
francese
Frisone
galiziano
georgiano
Tedesco
greco
Gujarati
Creolo haitiano
haussa
hawaiano
ebraico
No
Miao
ungherese
islandese
igbo
indonesiano
irlandesi
Italiano
giapponese
giavanese
Kannada
kazako
Khmer
Ruandese
coreano
curdo
Kirghizistan
TBC
latino
lettone
lituano
Lussemburghese
macedone
Malgashi
malese
Malayalam
maltese
Maori
Marathi
mongolo
Myanmar
nepalese
norvegese
norvegese
occitano
Pashtu
persiano
Polacco
portoghese
Punjabi
rumeno
russo
Samoano
Gaelico Scozzese
serbo
Inglese
Shona
Sindhi
Singalese
slovacco
sloveno
Somalo
spagnolo
Sundanese
Swahili
svedese
Tagalog
Tagico
Tamil
Tartaro
Telugu
tailandese
Turco
turkmeno
ucraino
Urdu
Uiguro
Uzbeco
vietnamita
gallese
Aiuto
yiddish
Yoruba
Zulù
I’ve walked enough boiler rooms to know: debris is relentless. That’s why the GL41H-16/16Q WCB flanged unit from Baoding (yes, the one made in North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding City, Hebei, China) keeps popping up in my notebook. It’s not flashy. It just works—even when steam is hot, water’s murky, and maintenance windows are… optimistic.
Plants are standardizing on flanged Y Type Strainer footprints to cut downtime, and specifying WCB bodies for thermal stability. I’m also seeing a push for higher open-area screens (to reduce pressure drop) and predictable testing to recognized standards—API 598 and ISO 5208 keep showing up on RFQs.
| Model | GL41H-16/16Q |
| Body material | WCB (ASTM A216), optional gray cast iron or nodular cast iron |
| Size range | DN15–DN500 |
| Pressure rating | PN10–PN16 (1.0–1.6 MPa) |
| Media & temp | Steam, water, oil ≤1.0 MPa; temperature ≤425°C |
| Connection | Flange (GB/T 9113, EN 1092-1 or ASME B16.5 on request) |
| Screen | SS304/316; 20–200 mesh; open area ≈2–3× pipe area (real-world use may vary) |
| Drain/clean-out | Blow-off plug or valve (BSP/NPT) |
Materials are batch-traced WCB or iron castings; machining centers finish flanges to spec; screens are laser-cut and seam-welded. Seats and covers are lapped to reduce leakage. Every unit gets pressure testing—shell and seat—before paint. Coating is typically epoxy around ≥80 μm. Service life? I’d say 8–10 years in typical water duty if you actually clean the basket; harsher steam can be less, naturally.
Boiler houses, district heating loops, pump protection upstream, compressed air (dry), oil distribution skids, and chilled water lines. Many customers say the compact Y Type Strainer orientation helps where basket strainers won’t physically fit.
| Vendor | Lead time ≈ | Certs/Standards | Customization | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HBYS Valves (Baoding) | 2–4 weeks | ISO 9001; API 598/ISO 5208 tests | Mesh, coating, flange drilling | Factory-direct pricing |
| Regional trader | 3–6 weeks | Varies; often ISO 9001 | Limited | Good for small MOQs |
| Global brand | 6–10 weeks | PED/CE; broad standards | High | Price premium |
Ask for differential-pressure ports, magnetic inserts for fine ferrous capture, and a blow-off valve preinstalled. For seawater, spec 316 screen and consider epoxy + PU topcoat. If you’re pushing oil at higher viscosity, a lower mesh (say 40–60) often avoids nuisance ΔP alarms.
Final thought—honestly, the hardware is the easy part. The win is in specifying the right mesh and planning a clean-out routine. Do that, and this compact workhorse will quietly protect your valves, pumps, and meters for years.