fire Different AVK gate valves installed

Gate valve introduction

A gate valve is a valve that isolates the flow of a fluid rather than for flow regulation. The valve is widely used for all type of applications and is suitable for both above and below ground installation.

Principle of operation

A gate valve is from a family of valves called multi-turn valves. In operation, the valve is fully open or closed when the gate/wedge move up or downwards on the threaded part of the stem/shaft. Gate valve is designed for fully open or fully closed service rather than for flow regulation. Operation of a gate valve is performed doing an either clockwise to close (CTC) or clockwise to open (CTO) rotating motion of the stem.

 Application of gate valve

When fully open, the typical gate valve has no obstruction in the flow path, resulting in very low flow resistance, therefore the gate valve is often used when minimum pressure loss and a free bore is needed, and this design makes it possible to use a pipe-cleaning pig. As the valve has to turn multiple times to go from open to closed position, the slow operation also prevents water hammer effects.

The valves can be operated by T-key, handwheel, gears or actuators according to any specific need.

Available for water, wastewater, gas, fire protection and industry applications

Gate valve with by-pass

By-pass valves are generally used for three basic reasons:

  • To allow the pipeline differential pressure to be balanced, lowering the torque requirement of the valve and permit one-man operation
  • With the main valve closed and the by-pass open, a continual flow is allowed, avoiding possible stagnation
  • Delayed filling of pipelines
Gate valve, cutaway and bypass

Metal vs resilient seated gate valve

Before the resilient seated gate valve was introduced to the market, gate valves with a metal seated wedge were widely used.

A resilient seated gate valve has a plain valve bottom allowing free passage for sand and pebbles in the valve. If impurities pass as the valve closes, the rubber surface will close around the impurities while the valve is closed. A high-quality rubber compound absorbs the impurities as the valve closes, and the impurities will be flushed away when the valve is opened again. The rubber surface will regain its original shape securing a drop-tight sealing. 

The conical wedge design and angular sealing devices of a metal seated wedge require a depression in the valve bottom to ensure a tight closure. Herewith, sand and pebbles are embedded in the bore. The pipe system will never be completely free from impurities regardless of how thoroughly the pipe is flushed upon installation or repair. Thus, any metal wedge will eventually lose its ability to be drop-tight. 

Rising vs non-rising stem gate valve

Rising stems are fixed to the gate and they rise and lower together as the valve is operated, providing a visual indication of the valve position and making it possible to grease the stem. A nut rotates around the threaded stem and moves it. This type is only suitable for above-ground installation. 

Non-rising stems are threaded into the gate and rotate with the wedge rising and lowering inside the valve. They take up less vertical space since the stem is kept within the valve body. AVK offers gate valves with a factory-mounted indicator on the upper end of the stem to indicate the valve position. Gate valves with non-rising stems are suitable for both above-ground and underground installations.

The majority of AVK’s range are designed with non-rising stem, but we also offer gate valves with rising stem for water, wastewater and fire protection applications. 

Parallel vs wedge-shaped gate valve

Gate valves can be divided into two main types: Parallel and wedge-shaped. The parallel gate valves use a flat gate between two parallel seats, and a popular type is the knife gate valve designed with a sharp edge on the bottom of the gate. The wedge-shaped gate valves use two inclined seats and a slightly mismatched inclined gate.

Most of AVK's gate valves are of the solid wedge-shaped design, but we also offer knife gate valves for wastewater treatment and parallel slide valves for gas supply.

Illustration of resilient seated vs metal seated gate valves
AVK gate valves with rising stem vs non-rising stem design
Video about the features and variants of gate valves - thumbnail

Video

Gate valves

Animation about features and variants of our gate valves for water supply, gas supply, wastewater treatment and fire protection.