If you’ve ever swapped a stubborn gate valve at 2 a.m., you’ll understand why many water teams quietly prefer the centerline butterfly valve. Compact, forgiving on alignment, and—when geared—surprisingly easy to operate. The D371X-10 wafer model I’ve followed from the shop floor in Baoding to the pump room is a practical example.

Utilities and HVAC contractors keep telling me the same thing: fewer parts, faster turnarounds. The centerline butterfly valve ticks both boxes. Current purchasing trends lean toward wafer bodies (lighter, cheaper shipping), gear operators for DN≥200, and coatings that handle slightly aggressive water. To be honest, nobody wants drama when the line is down.
Made in North Guzhuangying Village, Ansu Town, Xushui District, Baoding, Hebei, China, this turbine-operated wafer valve targets clean water services up to 80 °C. Below is the quick spec sheet I share with project managers:
| Parameter | D371X-10 Wafer |
|---|---|
| Size | DN40–DN1000 |
| Pressure class | 1.0–1.6 MPa (PN10/PN16) |
| Medium | Water (non-corrosive) |
| Temperature | ≤ 80 °C |
| Body material | Gray cast iron / Nodular (ductile) cast iron |
| Connection | Wafer type |
| Seat options | Typically EPDM or NBR (confirm per order) |
| Operator | Manual gear (turbine) |

Materials: cast iron or ductile iron body with a resilient seat. Methods: precision CNC machining of the stem bore, grit blast + epoxy coat (≈150–250 μm DFT, real-world use may vary), assembly in clean zones. Testing: shell and seat tests to API 598 or EN 12266-1; torque checks by size; coating adhesion per ISO 12944 systems where specified. Service life? Many customers say they see >50,000 open/close cycles on treated water, which tracks with what I’ve seen when alignment and throttling limits are respected.
- Municipal water distribution and treatment basins
- HVAC chilled/condensed water loops
- Light industrial process water, mining utility lines, fire protection loops (check listing needs)
Case note: A northern city plant swapped a cluster of DN300 gate valves for centerline butterfly valve units over a 48-hour shutdown. Operators reported ≈25% lower hand torque with the gearbox and faster isolation. No leaks post hot and cold cycles, which—frankly—made maintenance breathe easier.

| Feature | HBYS D371X-10 | Import A (generic) | Premium EU B |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pressure class | PN10/PN16 | PN10 | PN16 |
| Size range | DN40–DN1000 | DN50–DN600 | DN50–DN1200 |
| Seat options | EPDM/NBR (confirm) | EPDM | EPDM; optional WRAS |
| Gear operator | Standard on larger DN | Optional | Standard |
| Coating | Epoxy ≈150–250 μm | Epoxy ≈120 μm | Fusion bonded epoxy |
| Lead time | Short to mid (project-dependent) | Variable | Longer |
| Price band | $ | $ | $$$ |

Customization: seat (EPDM/NBR), disc coatings, extended stems, locking gear, position indicators. Compliance: routinely tested to API 598 / EN 12266-1; design follows EN 593 for butterfly valves; face-to-face often per ISO 5752 short series (check DN). Typical shop data I’ve seen: shell test at 1.5× PN; seat test at 1.1× PN; torque at DN200 ≈ 80–120 N·m with EPDM seat (water-lubricated)—actual sites vary with media and aging.
Customer feedback? Installation is quick, and the gear operator gives a reassuring feel—especially when throttling gently around 30–70% open. And yes, the centerline butterfly valve remains a go-to for retrofit tight spaces.
