What is the best valve for an actuator
Operations has had problems with the current actuated startup bypass
valves. The fluid in this aplication is Blend Oil. There is currently a
30s shutoff actuator on a 1/4 turn ball valve. Because only about 1/8
of the turn is actually doing something, they find it shuts off the flow
too quickly.
When I asked a vendor about a V-ball valve he said it wouldnt help the application. Is he right or wrong?
Typically what are the best valves to use with an actuator? Is this too much of a broad question?
The typical ball valve will get pretty much full flow at 5-10% open and
no slow down in flowrate until they reach 90-95% closure. If you're
getting as much trouble as you seem to be having, I would suggest you
look into a different port shape. Different port shapes may allow a
smoother flow control in your application. You must find a valve with a
Cv coefficient vs percent travel curve that is not allowing so much
flow at low % opens and has a slower and more evenly proportioned flow
adjustment on shutoff.
It is possible that a V port ball will
work, however depending on the severity of your problem, you may need a
globe-type control valve that can be accurately adjusted through most
all percent of accuator travel. There are several common flow to travel
curves for various valve types and port styles that may allow you to
nicely proportion the % open and % flow to solve your particular
problem. You just have to get the valve Cv-%travel characteristics off
the vendor's websites, calculate the flow at your particular start-up
and shut-down pressure increases and decreases and find a good match.
I don't particulary like control valves in recycle lines, but sometimes there's just no other way.
Another solution is to have two valve. One big and one small. The big one is used to macro control and the small one operates very slowly to achieve micro control.
MORE NEWS