86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
Mwafrika
Kialbeni
Kiamhari
Kiarabu
Kiarmenia
Kiazabajani
Kibasque
Kibelarusi
Kibengali
Kibosnia
Kibulgaria
Kikatalani
Cebuano
Kikosikani
Kikroeshia
Kicheki
Kideni
Kiholanzi
Kiingereza
Kiesperanto
Kiestonia
Kifini
Kifaransa
Kifrisia
Kigalisia
Kijojiajia
Kijerumani
Kigiriki
Kigujarati
Krioli ya Haiti
hausa
Kihawai
Kiebrania
Hapana
Miao
Kihungaria
Kiaislandi
igbo
Kiindonesia
irish
Kiitaliano
Kijapani
Kijava
Kikanada
kazakh
Khmer
Mnyarwanda
Kikorea
Kikurdi
Kirigizi
TB
Kilatini
Kilatvia
Kilithuania
Kilasembagi
Kimasedonia
Malgashi
Kimalei
Kimalayalam
Kimalta
Kimaori
Marathi
Kimongolia
Myanmar
Kinepali
Kinorwe
Kinorwe
Oksitani
Kipashto
Kiajemi
Kipolandi
Kireno
Kipunjabi
Kiromania
Kirusi
Kisamoa
Kigaeli cha Kiskoti
Kiserbia
Kiingereza
Kishona
Kisindhi
Kisinhala
Kislovakia
Kislovenia
Msomali
Kihispania
Kisunda
kiswahili
Kiswidi
Kitagalogi
Tajiki
Kitamil
Kitatari
Kitelugu
Thai
Kituruki
Waturukimeni
Kiukreni
Kiurdu
Uighur
Kiuzbeki
Kivietinamu
Kiwelisi
Msaada
Kiyidi
Kiyoruba
Kizulu
If you’re speccing a flange ball valve for real-world plants (not tidy brochure-land), you care about uptime, certification, and whether the actuator plays nice with your air supply. This cast steel, pneumatically actuated unit from Baoding, Hebei has been popping up on my radar—partly because procurement teams like its value, and partly because maintenance crews say it’s predictable.
Across water treatment, power, and light chemicals, the shift is toward compact actuated packages, documented leak testing, and traceable materials. Frankly, no one wants a mystery valve anymore. Plants now ask for API/EN pressure testing, ISO topworks, and—when budgets allow—SIL-capable accessories. Smart positioners are trending, though not every site needs them.
| Model | Q641fh-16c25 Cast Steel flange ball valve (pneumatic) |
| Body material | WCB (ASTM A216) — tough, weldable; good for general services |
| Size range | DN15–DN200 (≈ 1/2"–8") |
| Pressure rating | 1.6–6.4 MPa (≈ Class 150–600 real-world equivalents) |
| Temperature | -29 to 150 ℃ (seat-dependent; service may vary) |
| Media | Water, steam, oil, and similar utilities |
| Ends / Standard | Flanged; National Standard design, ASME B16.5 equivalents common |
| Actuation | Pneumatic (DA/SR); electric optional |
Under the hood, it’s a floating ball design on most sizes, anti-blowout stem, and a sensible stem seal stack. Seat options (PTFE, RPTFE, possibly PEEK on request) widen its temperature window. Fire-safe trim can be specified if the site requires it.
Origin: North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding City, Hebei, China. Many customers say logistics from Hebei to coastal ports is surprisingly quick.
Utility manifolds, steam condensate, water balance lines, light oils—these are its home turf. In food and beverage utilities (non-product contact), a compact flange ball valve with spring-return air actuator is practical. In district heating loops, we’ve seen the electric version preferred, but pneumatics still dominate in refineries.
| Factor | HBYS (Baoding) | Generic Importer | Local Fabricator |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lead time | ≈2–4 weeks for DN≤100; larger may vary | Uncertain; batch-dependent | Fast for standard parts; limited sizes |
| Testing docs | API/EN test report included | Sometimes summary only | Good, but format varies |
| Customization | Strong; actuator and seats mix-and-match | Limited—catalog only | Flexible; may raise cost |
| Warranty/Support | 12–18 months typical | Varies | Local, responsive |
Case A: North China power plant retrofitted DN80 flange ball valve units on condensate returns; leak tests showed Rate A, and operators liked the spring-return fail-close setup.
Case B: Food-beverage utility loop (Shandong): DN40 with RPTFE seats and a positioner for modulating control. After 9 months, packing adjustment once—no surprises.
This is a sensible, no-drama flange ball valve for utilities and light process duties. It won’t solve bad piping, but it will close tight, document the test, and keep your air system happy. And that’s what counts on Monday mornings.