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For use in general purpose applications with water, oil, and inert gas.
The three-piece bolted body comes apart for access to internal components without unthreading pipe connections and removing the valve from your line.
Limit wear and damage in high-cycling applications—these valves have additional seals that prevent leakage to reduce maintenance time.
A compact, lightweight actuator and an angular body allow you to install these valves in any mounting orientation.
About half the height of our other versa-mount valves, these fit in tight spots.
Also known as diaphragm valves, these have a diaphragm that can handle dirty liquid, slurries, and abrasive media without damage.
Less than half the height of standard severe-duty valves, these fit in small spaces and low-clearance pipelines.
Also known as butterfly valves.
Their ball-valve design allows these valves to handle three times the flow of butterfly valves.
Also known as actuated ball valves, these provide higher flow rates than other air-driven valves.
Also known as piston valves, these have a compact, lightweight actuator that allows them to be installed in any mounting orientation. They’re often used in water-treatment applications.
With a ball-valve design, these valves can handle three times the flow of butterfly valves.
Use air pressure to automatically control the flow of liquids in sanitary environments, such as food and beverage processing plants.
For food and beverage applications that require frequent cleaning, these valves have quick-clamp connections, polished internal surfaces, and a three-piece bolted body for easy disassembly.
Use these valves to safely transfer fuel and oil.
Attach these actuators to manual ball valves, butterfly valves, and plug valves with an ISO 5211 hole pattern to automatically start and stop flow with compressed air.
Automatically start, stop, and adjust flow through valves.
Use electricity to start and stop flow to valves automatically.
For use with threaded pipe, these valves have NPT connections. Use them with water, oil, air, and inert gas. All operate on compressed air to automatically divert flow between ports more quickly than motor-driven valves. You must control the air to the actuator using either an electric pilot valve or a manual on/off valve.
Bolt these valves to flanges. Use them with water, oil, air, and inert gas. All operate on compressed air to automatically divert flow between ports more quickly than motor-driven valves. You must control the air to the actuator using either an electric pilot valve or a manual on/off valve.
Often used in sanitary valve manifolds, these 3-A certified valves can be cleaned in place to eliminate the risk of cross contamination in food, beverage, and dairy lines. All have sanitary quick-clamp fittings for easy disassembly. They operate on compressed air to automatically divert flow between ports more quickly than motor-driven valves. You must control the air to the actuator using either an electric pilot valve or a manual on/off valve.
For food and beverage systems that require frequent cleaning, these valves have sanitary quick-clamp connections for easy disassembly. They operate on compressed air to automatically divert flow between ports more quickly than motor-driven valves. You must control the air to the actuator using either an electric pilot valve or a manual on/off valve.
For faster actuation than motor-driven valves, these operate on compressed air. Integrate them into PLC systems for automatic control over the valve position based on system conditions. The actuator has a built-in electric pilot valve that controls the air supply to the valve. Set how much to open the valve using the programmable controller on the actuator.
Often used to extend and then retract a cylinder at different speeds, they create two actions and have two exhaust ports, which allows you to control the speed of each action by attaching a flow control valve to each exhaust port. Also known as pilot valves and 4-way valves, they use an air signal to actuate, so they're good for environments where electrical use may be dangerous.
In the off position, these valves stop equipment in a locked position with air pressure holding it in place. Often used to extend and then retract a cylinder at different speeds, they create two actions and have two exhaust ports, which allows you to control the speed of each action by attaching a flow control valve to each exhaust port. They actuate by air signal, so they're good for environments where electrical use may be dangerous.
These valves create one action, such as extending a cylinder. Also known as 3/2 or pilot valves, they use an air signal to actuate, so they're good for environments where electrical use may be dangerous.
Also known as blocking valves, these valves allow airflow while an air signal is applied to the air pilot. When the signal stops, the valve closes, trapping air in the system.
Designed to be mounted inline, these valves can be placed in an easy-to-reach location along your line to control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow. A numeric indicator provides a relative measure of airflow, similar to the volume dial on a speaker, so it's easy to set the same flow rate with each use.
A numeric indicator provides a relative measure of airflow, similar to the volume dial on a speaker, so it's easy to set the same flow rate with each use. Mount them directly to cylinder ports, eliminating additional tubing between the cylinder and valve for better control than inline valves. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow.
Designed to be mounted inline, these valves can be installed in an easy-to-reach location along your line. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow.
Mount these valves directly to cylinder ports, eliminating additional tubing between the cylinder and valve for better control than inline valves. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow.
A swiveling outlet port on these valves makes connections from any direction. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow.
A fine-adjustment dial allows tighter control of airflow and cylinder speed than other flow control valves. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow entering or exiting.
Prevent accidental airflow changes with these valves, which require an adjustment tool to alter their flow rate. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow.
These valves handle pressure up to 265 psi. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow entering or exiting.
Designed to be mounted inline, these valves can be placed in easy-to-reach locations. Made of plastic and stainless steel parts, they have excellent corrosion resistance. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow.
Mount these valves directly to cylinder ports, eliminating additional tubing between the cylinder and valve for better control than inline valves. Made of plastic and stainless steel parts, they have excellent corrosion resistance. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow.
Protect air-powered equipment in emergency shut-off situations—when system pressure drops, these valves automatically close to stop cylinder motion, even at mid-stroke. They control the speed of air-powered equipment by adjusting the volume of airflow entering or exiting.
Independently control the speed of airflow in two directions. These valves regulate the speed of airflow as it enters or exits equipment, and are often used to control the extension and retraction speed of an air cylinder at the same time.
Made of PBT, these plastic valves are more corrosion resistant than valves made of aluminum or nylon. A single dial adjusts airflow equally in both directions, controlling the extension and retraction speed of an air cylinder at the same time.
Adjust airflow equally in both directions. These valves regulate the speed of airflow as it enters and exits equipment. They're often used to control the extension and retraction speed of an air cylinder at the same time.
Prevent damage to your equipment by limiting startup airflow and then gradually raising the airflow rate to operating levels.
Choose the pressure range you need. When these valves receive an air signal, they quickly dump exhaust air to the atmosphere without routing it back through a directional control valve to speed up the movement of equipment. They're often used with air compressors that require continuous operation. Also known as quick exhaust valves.
Convert a continuous stream of air into a series of quick pulses, reducing air consumption by up to 50% and improving performance in air-blowing applications such as cleaning and drying.
With an integrated valve and multiple mounting options, these air cylinders install quickly, right where you need them, to push and pull light loads.