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Sunday, January 28, 2024

on video hydraulic pressure relief valve |pressure relief valve


 hydraulic pressure relief valve |pressure relief valve

Our video shows you the cracking pressure, the reseating pressure and what you really need to know about how a hydraulic pressure relief valve works.


Relief valves are used everywhere. They are designed to limit the pressure in a chamber or system. That is a big deal if safety is involved. Here are a few examples. Here is a low pressure relief valve set at about 8 bar to protect an air receiver. Here is a neat Nupro pipe check relief valve adjustable up to 40 bar. Here is a cartridge relief valve that screws into a manifold for oil hydraulics. There is even a miniature relief valve built into the lid of a pressure cooker.


Some relief valves are factory set and can’t be adjusted. Some are safety accessories and you mustn't adjust them. Others have to be set to suit your operating pressure. All will only work best over a certain range with a particular spring and orifice. Look at the data sheet to check your required setting is in the range or you won’t get very good performance.

I’m looking at this little cartridge relief valve that we fit to our Micropac pumps and I am going to set it to meet my pressure requirement.


This is a small direct acting hydraulic relief valve that we use screwed into the side of our Micropac pumps. Let's look at the basics of this. A plunger with a cone is pressed into an orifice using a spring. This seals and won’t let flow past. Let’s increase the system pressure and at some point the force generated over the area of the orifice simply lifts the plunger out of the orifice against the spring load. The pressure is vented or relieved back to the tank or to the atmosphere as the relief valve opens. We call this the cracking pressure. The plunger moves back again under spring load as the pressure is now lower and resets again.

If the relief valve is adjustable, it is probably using a screw to adjust it. On our Micropac valve, we need to unscrew the dust cap to expose a hexagon socket on the end of the adjusting screw.


So that is our relief valve adjusted on this Micropac pump. This is only a simple direct acting type. Remember, relief valves are often safety accessories under the Pressure equipment directive so they will need to be an approved type in that case. Go very easy with adjusting a relief valve. Lots of small adjustments are better than damaging the valve. And test it before you finish.


 hydraulic pressure relief valve |pressure relief valve

Our video shows you the cracking pressure, the reseating pressure and what you really need to know about how a hydraulic pressure relief valve works.


Relief valves are used everywhere. They are designed to limit the pressure in a chamber or system. That is a big deal if safety is involved. Here are a few examples. Here is a low pressure relief valve set at about 8 bar to protect an air receiver. Here is a neat Nupro pipe check relief valve adjustable up to 40 bar. Here is a cartridge relief valve that screws into a manifold for oil hydraulics. There is even a miniature relief valve built into the lid of a pressure cooker.


Some relief valves are factory set and can’t be adjusted. Some are safety accessories and you mustn't adjust them. Others have to be set to suit your operating pressure. All will only work best over a certain range with a particular spring and orifice. Look at the data sheet to check your required setting is in the range or you won’t get very good performance.

I’m looking at this little cartridge relief valve that we fit to our Micropac pumps and I am going to set it to meet my pressure requirement.


This is a small direct acting hydraulic relief valve that we use screwed into the side of our Micropac pumps. Let's look at the basics of this. A plunger with a cone is pressed into an orifice using a spring. This seals and won’t let flow past. Let’s increase the system pressure and at some point the force generated over the area of the orifice simply lifts the plunger out of the orifice against the spring load. The pressure is vented or relieved back to the tank or to the atmosphere as the relief valve opens. We call this the cracking pressure. The plunger moves back again under spring load as the pressure is now lower and resets again.

If the relief valve is adjustable, it is probably using a screw to adjust it. On our Micropac valve, we need to unscrew the dust cap to expose a hexagon socket on the end of the adjusting screw.


So that is our relief valve adjusted on this Micropac pump. This is only a simple direct acting type. Remember, relief valves are often safety accessories under the Pressure equipment directive so they will need to be an approved type in that case. Go very easy with adjusting a relief valve. Lots of small adjustments are better than damaging the valve. And test it before you finish.

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