Connection
Thread type, flange standard, and port geometry need to line up before you assume interchangeability.
Comparison Hub
Use this page when you need to compare valve models side by side before treating them as viable equivalents. Cross-reference tells you where to start. Comparison tells you whether a replacement is actually safe to source.
Thread type, flange standard, and port geometry need to line up before you assume interchangeability.
Pressure class, operating envelope, and temperature rating often break otherwise similar part matches.
Material mismatches can introduce corrosion, media-compatibility, or sanitation failures even when dimensions look close.
Manual, pneumatic, electric, or fail-safe behavior changes the effective replacement decision more than a nameplate match does.
1. Start from the source model
Open the dedicated cross-reference page when you already know the original brand and model.
Open Cross Reference2. Validate category fit
Use category sheets to confirm that you are comparing valves inside the same functional family.
Jelajahi lembar PDF3. Review the spec owner page
Open the product specification page to confirm datasheet-level details and source documents.
Merek4. Send the RFQ with context
Once the comparison is technically grounded, pass the short list into the sourcing workflow with notes on what matters.
Minta penawaranNo. A cross-reference match is a starting point. Comparison work is where you confirm the real fit, rating, and application risk.
Start with the functional family, then validate connection, pressure rating, material, and actuation before you compare commercial terms.
Use a category sheet when you only know the valve family. Use a model-level page when you already have the original brand and part number.
Use the RFQ flow with the source model and shortlisted candidates so the sourcing team can review the comparison manually.