High Performance Butterfly Valve

A butterfly valve is a quarter-turn rotational motion valve, that is used to stop, regulate, and start flow. Butterfly valves are easy and fast to open. A 90° rotation of the handle provides a complete closure or opening of the valve. Large butterfly valves are usually equipped with a so-called gearbox, where the handwheel by gear is connected to the stem. This simplifies the operation of the valve, but at the expense of speed.

BUTTERFLY VALVE

A butterfly valve is a quarter-turn rotational motion valve, that is used to stop, regulate, and start flow. Butterfly valves are easy and fast to open. A 90° rotation of the handle provides a complete closure or opening of the valve. Large butterfly valves are usually equipped with a so-called gearbox, where the handwheel by gear is connected to the stem. This simplifies the operation of the valve, but at the expense of speed.

Types of butterfly valve
Butterfly valves have a short circular body, a round disc, metal-to-metal or soft seats, top and bottom shaft bearings, and a stuffing box. The construction of a butterfly valve body varies. A commonly used design is the wafer type that fits between two flanges. Another type, the lug wafer design, is held in place between two flanges by bolts that join the two flanges and pass through holes in the valve’s outer casing. Butterfly valves are even available with flanged, threaded and butt welding ends, but they are not often applied.

Butterfly valve possess many advantages over gate, globe, plug, and ball valve, especially for large valve applications. Savings in weight, space, and cost are the most obvious advantage. The maintenance costs are usually low because there is a minimal number of moving parts and there are no pockets to trap fluids. Butterfly valves are especially well-suited for the handling of large flows of liquids or gases at relatively low pressures and for the handling of slurries or liquids with large amounts of suspended solids. Butterfly valve are built on the principle of a pipe damper. The flow control element is a disc of approximately the same diameter as the internal diameter of the adjoining pipe, which rotates on either a vertical or horizontal axis. When the disc lies parallel to the piping run, the valve is fully opened. When the disc approaches the perpendicular position, the valve is shut. Intermediate positions, for throttling purposes, can be secured in place by handle-locking devices.