86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
Afriški
albanski
amharščina
arabsko
armenski
azerbajdžanski
baskovščina
beloruski
bengalščina
bosanski
bolgarščina
katalonski
Cebuano
korziški
hrvaško
češki
danščina
nizozemščina
angleščina
Esperanto
estonski
finščina
francosko
frizijščina
galicijski
gruzijski
nemški
grški
gudžaratščina
haitska kreolščina
hiša
havajski
hebrejščina
ne
Miao
madžarski
islandski
igbo
indonezijski
irski
italijanščina
japonska
javanska
kanadščina
kazahstanski
kmerski
ruandski
korejščina
kurdski
Kirgiz
TB
latinsko
latvijščina
litovski
luksemburški
makedonski
Malgaši
malajščina
malajalamščina
maltežan
maorski
maratščina
mongolski
Mjanmar
nepalsko
norveški
norveški
okcitanščina
paštu
perzijsko
poljski
portugalščina
pandžabščina
romunščina
ruski
samoanska
škotska gelščina
srbsko
angleščina
Shona
Sindhi
singalščina
slovaški
Slovenščina
somalski
španski
sundanski
svahili
švedščina
Tagalog
tadžikistanski
tamilščina
tatarščina
telugu
tajska
turško
turkmenski
ukrajinski
urdu
ujgurski
Uzbek
vietnamski
valižanščina
pomoč
jidiš
joruba
Zulu
If you spend enough time around pipe shops and refineries (guilty), you learn that reliability often hinges on seemingly simple parts. Exhibit A: carbon steel forged flanges. Not glamorous, but they hold pressure, align pipe, and save downtime when they’re specified right. I was just in Hebei recently—the factory floor hums, the ring rollers glow, and the QC guys never stop measuring.
Supply chains are settling, but traceability is the new must-have. Many customers say they won’t touch flanges without full MTRs, heat numbers, and NDE records. Hydrogen-ready sealing faces, better coatings for brine service, and RTJ for higher pressures are all in demand. And yes—shorter lead times. Always.
Origin: North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding City, Hebei Province, China. To be honest, that region has become a quiet powerhouse for forged components.
| Spec | Details |
|---|---|
| Standard | ANSI/ASME B16.5 (CL 150/300/600/900) |
| Sizes | 1/2"–48" (≈ DN15–DN1200) |
| Types | Welding Neck, Slip-On, Blind; RF/RTJ faces |
| Materials | CS A105/SA105N; SS 304/304L, 316/316L |
| Coating | Black/yellow paint; rust‑proof oil |
| Testing | Dimensional per B16.5; hydrostatic ≈1.5× rating; UT/MT as ordered |
| Service temp (CS) | Around −29°C to 425°C (real‑world use may vary by code and media) |
Materials: ASTM A105/SA105N billets. Methods: open-die/closed-die forging or ring rolling; normalizing or Q&T as required; CNC machining; serrated facing. Testing: PMI, hardness, UT/MT, hydrotest per ASME practices, dimensional audits. Documentation: MTRs with heat/lot traceability. In fact, the better shops run final gauge checks on every bore and bolt circle.
Oil & gas gathering lines, chemical plants (non-sour to mildly sour with NACE compliance), power generation balance-of-plant, shipbuilding, water and fire protection. With carbon steel forged flanges, the sweet spot is general service at moderate temperatures and pressures.
| Vendor | Certs | Tolerance (typ.) | Lead Time | Customization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HBYS (Hebei) | ISO 9001; B16.5; NACE on request | Bore ±0.25 mm ≈; BCD ±0.3 mm | 2–4 weeks (stock for CL300 common sizes) | Non‑std drilling, RTJ, coatings |
| Vendor M | ISO 9001 | Bore ±0.4 mm ≈ | 4–6 weeks | Limited options |
| Vendor G | — | Bore ±0.5 mm ≈ | 6–8 weeks | Standard only |
Options include RTJ grooves, orifice flanges, special drill templates, raised face serration depth, and NACE MR0175/ISO 15156 material selection for sour service. For stainless pairs, PMI is wise. For carbon steel forged flanges, SA105N normalization often improves toughness and consistency.
Middle East pipeline tie-in, CL300 RF WN, 8", A105N. Hydrotested at ≈1.5× MAWP for 10 minutes—no visible leaks. After 9 months, operators reported zero bolt re-torque events. One foreman joked, “boring is good” for flanges. I guess that’s the point.
In typical utility and process duties, expect 20–30 years if corrosion is managed (coatings, gasket selection, proper torque). Always align piping, use calibrated torque tools, and follow ASME PCC-1 bolt-up guidance—small steps, big payoff.
Citations