If you’re shortlisting an 8 wafer butterfly valve for water, HVAC, or light chemical duty, here’s a concise insider’s view. I’ve watched the Series F170 line coming out of the Development area of Huanmadian, NingJin county, Hebei province, China, for a while. It’s built to MSS SP-67, BS5155, and API 609, which—honestly—already filters out a lot of “close enough” catalog parts.
Two ongoing trends: faster retrofits and tighter torque windows. Utilities and OEM skids want compact, low-torque valves that drop into mixed flanges without drama. The F170 wafer body mates with GB, ANSI, DIN, BS, and JIS flanges—handy when your site drawings are… optimistic. I guess that’s why many customers say the install takes longer to get the old bolts free than to seat the new valve.
This WAFER TYPE BUTTERFLY VALVE covers 2″ to 12″. The 8″ size sits in the sweet spot for water distribution, chilled water, and general process lines.
| Standard compliance | MSS SP-67, BS5155, API 609; testing per ISO 5208 / API 598 (Rate A, zero visible leakage) |
| Face-to-face | EN 558 / ISO 5752 Series 20 (≈) |
| Pressure class | PN10/PN16 and ANSI Class 150 (real-world use may vary with seat) |
| Body / disc / seat | Ductile iron body; SS304/SS316 or Nylon-coated DI disc; EPDM/NBR/PTFE seat options |
| Shaft | One-piece thru shaft for dependability; stem drives disc directly |
| Temperature | EPDM ≈ -20°C to +120°C; PTFE up to ≈ +180°C (media-dependent) |
| Operation | Lever up to DN200 (8″); gear/actuated for DN250–DN300 |
Materials are traceable (heat numbers on castings), then CNC machining brings tight stem-disk tolerances. Seats are compression-molded; assemblies get FBE or epoxy paint ≈ 200–300 μm DFT. Every valve is hydro-tested—shell at 1.5× rated pressure, seat at 1.1×—per ISO 5208/API 598. Typical life is ≥50,000 cycles in clean water service; I’ve seen higher when alignment is spot-on.
The one-piece shaft is boring—in a good way. Less play, fewer surprises. The disc profile helps keep torque low; on an 8″ EPDM-seated unit, I’ve measured ≈ 120–150 N·m to break at PN16 with clean water. Many customers say the shutoff is “quiet” compared with older elastomer seats.
| Vendor | Standards | Seat options | Lead time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hongda (F170) | API 609, MSS SP-67, BS5155 | EPDM, NBR, PTFE | ≈ 2–4 weeks | One-piece shaft; broad flange compatibility |
| Brand B | API 609, EN 593 | EPDM, FKM | ≈ 4–6 weeks | Nice gear operators; pricier |
| Import A | Partial MSS | EPDM only | Stock varies | Check test certificates carefully |
Options include PTFE seat for chemical duty, SS316 disc, gear or pneumatic actuator, locking lever, FBE coating, and NACE MR0175 trim on request. ISO 9001 and CE/PED documentation are standard; WRAS/ACS can be discussed for potable applications. Traceability and MTRs are available—it’s not glamorous, but procurement teams love it.
A municipal booster station swapped aging 8″ gate valves for the 8 wafer butterfly valve to reduce footprint and torque. Results: install time dropped by ≈ 35%, no machining of flanges, zero visible leakage at 1.1× PN16 on site tests, and operators reported smoother throttling around 25–40° open. After six months, no seat set issues—helped by correct bolt torques and proper centering (too often overlooked).
If you’ve got abrasive slurry or cavitation risks at high ΔP, consider a lined pinch valve or high-performance double-offset butterfly. Otherwise, for clean utility service, the 8 wafer butterfly valve is a pragmatic, budget-sensible choice.
Authoritative references