86-312-8695888
86-13722963501
info@hbysindustry.com
Afrikalı
Arnavut
Amharca
Arapça
Ermeni
Azerice
Bask
Belarusça
Bengalce
Boşnakça
Bulgarca
Katalanca
Cebuano
Korsikalı
Hırvat
Çek
Danimarka
Flemenkçe
İngilizce
Esperanto
Estonyalı
Fince
Fransızca
Frizce
Galiçyaca
Gürcüce
Almanca
Yunan
Gujarati
Haiti Kreyolu
Hausa
Hawaii dili
İbranice
Hayır
Miao
Macarca
İzlandaca
İbo
Endonezya dili
İrlandalı
İtalyan
Japonca
Cava
Kannadaca
Kazak
Kmer
Ruanda
Koreli
Kürt
Kırgız
TB
Latince
Letonca
Litvanyalı
Lüksemburgca
Makedonca
Malgaşi
Malayca
Malayalam
Malta
Maori
Marathi
Moğolca
Myanmar
Nepalce
Norveççe
Norveççe
Oksitanca
Peştuca
Farsça
Lehçe
Portekizce
Pencap
Romen
Rusça
Samoalı
İskoç Galcesi
Sırpça
İngilizce
Shona
Sindhi
Sinhala
Slovak
Slovence
Somalili
İspanyol
Sundan dili
Svahili
İsveççe
Tagalogca
Tacikçe
Tamilce
Tatar
Telugu
Tay dili
Türkçe
Türkmence
Ukrayna
Urduca
Uygur
Özbekçe
Vietnam
Galce
Yardım
Yidiş
Yoruba
Zuluca
If you’re speccing a reducing valve for municipal water or a tight HVAC loop, you probably want less theory and more “what actually works.” Same here. I’ve walked enough pump rooms to know the difference between tidy schematics and real-world noise, surges, and maintenance headaches. The Reducing And Stabilizing Valve 200X from HBYS Valves—made in North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding, Hebei, China—has been popping up a lot lately, and not by accident.
It’s a pilot-operated reducing valve, designed to hold a stable downstream pressure even when the upstream swings. Medium: water. Temperature: ≤50 ℃. Pressure class: PN10–PN25 (1.0–2.5 MPa). Caliber: DN20–450. Body: cast iron. Connection: flange. That’s the elevator pitch; the interesting part is how calmly it rides out transients. Many customers say the 200X feels “boringly stable,” which is praise in waterworks.
| Model | 200X Reducing & Stabilizing |
| Medium | Water (treated; non-corrosive) |
| Temperature | ≤50 ℃ (≈122 °F) |
| Pressure Range | PN10–PN25 (1.0–2.5 MPa) |
| Sizes | DN20–DN450 |
| Body Material | Cast iron (external epoxy coating ≈250 μm; real-world use may vary) |
| Ends | Flanged (EN 1092-2 / ASME B16.1 options on request) |
| Face-to-Face | ≈ ISO 5752 Series 10 (check drawing before install) |
| Service Life | Around 20–30 years with treated water and routine maintenance |
| Vendor | Certs | Lead Time | Customization | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HBYS Valves (Baoding, Hebei) | ISO 9001; test per ISO 5208/API 598 | ≈3–6 weeks | DN20–450, pilot ranges, gauges, coatings | Good value; responsive on drawings |
| Vendor A (Import) | ISO 9001; CE | ≈6–10 weeks | Limited elastomer choices | Higher list price; polished datasheets |
| Vendor B (Local distributor) | Stock QA; third-party tests on request | Stock to 2 weeks | Mostly standard SKUs | Fast delivery; fewer custom options |
Pilot spring ranges (low pressure for rooftops; higher for district mains), diaphragm in NBR/EPDM, epoxy color/thickness, pressure gauges, stainless trim. For potable projects, ask for elastomer compliance documentation before approval. It seems small, but submittals live or die on that line item.
High-rise booster, Baoding: swapped a chattering unit for a 200X reducing valve; after pilot adjustment, night-flow stability improved and maintenance logs show fewer nuisance calls. To be honest, what stood out was the quiet.
Irrigation loop, coastal project: two-stage reduction using series 200X reducing valves to limit cavitation. Not glamorous, but parts looked clean at 18-month inspection.
If you want a dependable reducing valve with sensible lead times and solid testing pedigree, the 200X is a practical pick. Check water quality, size for flow, leave room to service the pilot, and verify standards in the submittal. Simple, which is exactly the point.