86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
Afrika
bahasa Albania
Amharic
bahasa arab
bahasa Armenia
Azerbaijan
Basque
Belarusia
Benggali
Bosnia
bahasa Bulgaria
Catalan
Cebuano
Korsika
bahasa Croatia
bahasa Czech
Danish
Belanda
Inggeris
Esperanto
bahasa Estonia
bahasa Finland
Perancis
Frisian
Galicia
Georgian
Jerman
bahasa Yunani
Gujerat
Kreol Haiti
hausa
hawaii
bahasa Ibrani
Tidak
Miao
bahasa Hungary
bahasa Iceland
igbo
Indonesia
irish
Itali
Jepun
bahasa jawa
Kannada
kazakh
Khmer
Rwanda
Korea
Kurdish
Kyrgyz
TB
bahasa Latin
bahasa Latvia
bahasa Lithuania
Luxembourgish
Macedonia
Malgashi
Melayu
Malayalam
bahasa Malta
Maori
Marathi
Mongolia
Myanmar
Nepal
bahasa Norway
bahasa Norway
Occitan
Pashto
Parsi
Poland
Portugis
Punjabi
bahasa Romania
bahasa Rusia
bahasa Samoa
Gaelik Scotland
bahasa Serbia
Inggeris
Shona
Sindhi
Sinhala
Bahasa Slovak
Bahasa Slovenia
Somalia
bahasa Sepanyol
bahasa sunda
bahasa Swahili
bahasa Sweden
bahasa Tagalog
bahasa Tajik
bahasa Tamil
Tatar
Telugu
Thai
bahasa Turki
orang Turkmen
Ukraine
bahasa Urdu
Uighur
Uzbek
bahasa Vietnam
bahasa Wales
Bantu
Yiddish
Yoruba
Zulu
If you’ve ever jumped at the thump of water hammer after a pump trip, you’ll understand why the humble soft close check valve is getting so much attention. In municipal stations and high-rise HVAC rooms, the buzz is the same: slow, controlled closure beats hard slams every day of the week.
The Delaying Close Check Valve 300X uses a pilot-controlled hydraulic mechanism to delay and cushion closure—reducing surge, protecting pumps, and yes, quieting the room. It’s not glamorous, but it’s the sort of reliability upgrade maintenance teams quietly cheer. Industry trend-wise, utilities are prioritizing non-slam check technology, pairing it with VFD logic and surge analysis to cut lifecycle costs and noise. Honestly, it’s overdue.
| Parameter | Delaying Close Check Valve 300X (≈ values; real-world use may vary) |
|---|---|
| Medium | Water |
| Temperature | ≤ 80 ℃ |
| Caliber (DN) | DN25–450 |
| Pressure rating | 1.0–2.5 MPa (PN10/16/25) |
| Body material | Cast iron (epoxy-coated interior/exterior) |
| Connection | Flange |
| Closure profile | Hydraulic, adjustable delay/soft close |
| Service life | Designed for ≈200k cycles under water duty |
| Testing | Hydrostatic per GB/T 13927, API 598 |
| Certifications | ISO 9001 QMS; material traceability on request |
Feedback? Many customers say noise drops instantly. One ops manager joked the first day felt “suspiciously calm.” Hard to argue.
Materials arrive with heat numbers, then: precision machining → shot‑blast → fusion‑bonded epoxy → pilot assembly → hydrostatic shell/seat tests (per GB/T 13927, API 598) → closure time calibration → final inspection. Typical life? 10–15 years in clean water with routine maintenance; harsher water needs shorter intervals.
| taip | Closing profile | Surge risk | Maintenance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 300X soft close check valve | Hydraulic, adjustable delay | Low | Pilot inspection, periodic |
| Generic spring check | Fast snap | Medium–High | Low |
| Hydraulic non‑slam (alt. brand) | Cushioned | Low | Medium (pilot service) |
Coating thickness, pilot orifice sizes, closing-time range, gauge kits, position indicators, and PN10/16/25 flanges. Sizes DN25–450 are standard; larger diameters by request. Documentation: hydro test reports, MTCs, and—if needed—EN 1074 compliance notes for potable networks.
A coastal booster set (PN16, DN300) replaced swing checks with soft close check valve units. After commissioning, peak surge recorded during emergency trip dropped from ≈1.60 MPa to ≈1.20 MPa (about 25% lower), with audible “slam” effectively gone. Operators also noticed fewer seal weeps on downstream fittings three months in—small but telling.
Origin: 1. North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding City, Hebei Province, China.
To be honest, the quiet payoff is immediate; the ROI shows up later in reduced pipe stress and pump wear. Just remember: set the closure timing to your system curve, not a guess.