News

Why Industries Prefer Butterfly Valves for Large Lines
Date:2026-06-06 11:19:47 Author:Zhejiang Kinko Fluid Equipment Co., Ltd

Why Industries Prefer Butterfly Valves for Large Lines

When pipeline diameters exceed DN300 (12 inches), the valve selection equation changes dramatically. Weight, cost, installation complexity, and actuator sizing become exponential factors. In this large-line regime, butterfly valves consistently outperform gate, globe, and ball valves across nearly every metric.

From municipal water transmission mains to power plant cooling intakes and petrochemical transfer lines, industries overwhelmingly specify butterfly valves for large-diameter applications. But why? And what makes them superior to traditional alternatives?

At Kinko, we engineer butterfly valves up to DN1200 (48 inches) specifically for large-line service. This guide explains the engineering and economic advantages that drive industry preference.

The Fundamental Challenge of Large Lines

A pipeline's cross-sectional area increases with the square of its diameter. A DN600 (24") line has four times the flow area of a DN300 (12") line. This scaling creates three major challenges for valve specification:

  1. Weight: A large gate valve can weigh several tons, requiring structural reinforcement.

  2. Actuation Force: The force required to lift a massive gate or rotate a heavy ball increases dramatically.

  3. Cost: Material volume drives exponential price increases for large valves.

Butterfly valves address all three challenges through their fundamentally efficient design.

Key Reasons for Industry Preference

1. Dramatically Lower Weight and Material Usage

A butterfly valve's disc weighs a fraction of a gate or ball valve's obturator. Compare typical weights for DN600 (24") valves:

Valve TypeApproximate Weight (DN600)Installation Requirement
Gate Valve (cast iron)1,800 - 2,500 kgCrane + structural supports
Ball Valve (full bore)2,500 - 4,000 kgHeavy lifting equipment
Butterfly Valve (wafer)150 - 250 kgTwo-person lift or small hoist

The butterfly valve is 10-15x lighter than an equivalent gate or ball valve. This translates to lower shipping costs, simpler installation, and reduced pipe support requirements.

2. Exponential Cost Savings at Large Diameters

Valve pricing is non-linear with diameter. The cost differential between butterfly and alternative valves widens dramatically as size increases.

DiameterBall Valve Cost IndexGate Valve Cost IndexKinko Butterfly Cost Index
DN100 (4")1.00.80.4
DN300 (12")3.52.00.6
DN600 (24")12.05.01.0
DN1000 (40")N/A (rare)15.02.5

At DN600, a Kinko butterfly valve typically costs 80% less than a full-bore ball valve and 50-70% less than a gate valve of equivalent pressure rating.

9f2496a1d5944d6da5366e80d2355558.jpeg~tplv-a9rns2rl98-downsize_watermark_1_5_b_WH_800x800px.jpg

3. Compact Face-to-Face Dimensions Save Space

Butterfly valves have the shortest face-to-face length of any industrial valve type per ISO 5752. In large lines, this space savings is substantial.

DiameterGate Valve LengthBall Valve LengthButterfly Valve Length (Wafer)
DN300500 mm400 mm78 mm
DN600800 mm700 mm102 mm
DN10001,200 mm1,100 mm150 mm

A butterfly valve requires 5-10x less pipeline length than a gate valve. For large piping systems, this reduces overall plant footprint and allows tighter equipment spacing.

4. Practical Automation at Large Sizes

Actuating a large gate valve requires a multi-turn electric actuator with high torque to lift the gate against pressure. Actuating a large ball valve requires a quarter-turn actuator with massive torque due to the ball's surface area.

A butterfly valve's quarter-turn motion and low torque requirement enable:

  • Smaller actuators (50-70% lower torque rating than ball valves)

  • Pneumatic actuation even at DN600 (impractical for gate valves)

  • Battery-operated fail-safe systems for emergency shutdown

  • Manual operation without gear reducers (for lines up to DN200)

5. Field-Serviceable Without Line Removal

Large gate and ball valves typically require removal from the pipeline for seat or seal replacement—a multi-day operation involving cranes and system shutdown.

Butterfly valves, particularly lug and wafer designs, can be serviced in-line. The disc, seat, and stem bearings are accessible by removing the actuator and disassembling the valve between flanges. For Kinko valves, a complete seat replacement takes less than two hours.

Industry-by-Industry Adoption

IndustryTypical Large Line SizePreferred ValveWhy Butterfly?
Municipal WaterDN300 - DN2000Lug or wafer butterflyCost, weight, low pressure drop
Power Generation (Cooling)DN400 - DN1200Double flanged butterflyLarge diameter feasibility, automation
Wastewater TreatmentDN300 - DN1000Wafer butterflyCorrosion resistance, frequent cycling
Pulp & PaperDN300 - DN800Lug butterfly (SS316)Abrasion resistance, in-line service
Petrochemical TransferDN300 - DN600High-performance butterflyFire safety, bi-directional shutoff
HVAC District CoolingDN300 - DN800Wafer butterflyCompact footprint, low torque
DesalinationDN300 - DN1000Lug butterfly (Al-Bronze)Seawater corrosion resistance
9f71a12de99042f6890c8e213fb7f2ee.jpeg~tplv-a9rns2rl98-downsize_watermark_1_5_b_WH_800x800px.jpg

Kinko Large-Line Butterfly Valve Series

Our Kinko LL Series (Large Line) is engineered specifically for diameters from DN300 to DN1200, balancing low torque, durability, and automation readiness.

ParameterKinko LL-100 (Wafer)Kinko LL-200 (Lug)Kinko LL-300 (Double Flanged)
Size RangeDN300 - DN600DN300 - DN800DN350 - DN1200
Max Pressure10 bar (DN>300) / 16 bar (DN300)10 bar (DN>500) / 16 bar (DN300-500)10 bar (all sizes)
Body MaterialDuctile Iron GGG40Ductile Iron GGG40Cast Steel / Ductile Iron
Disc Material OptionsDI coated / SS316SS316 / Al-Bronze / DuplexSS316 / Duplex
Seat MaterialEPDM / NBR / VitonEPDM / PTFEEPDM / Viton
Disc DesignStreamlined low-profileStreamlined with anti-cavitation edgeHydrodynamic airfoil
Top Flange (ISO 5211)F14 / F16F14 / F16 / F25F16 / F25
AutomationElectric or pneumaticElectric or pneumatic (direct)Electric or hydraulic
Standard Face-to-FaceISO 5752 Series 20ISO 5752 Series 20ISO 5752 Series 13

Procurement Checklist for Large-Line Butterfly Valves

When sourcing butterfly valves for large-diameter lines, verify:

  • Face-to-face dimension per ISO 5752 (confirm compatibility with existing flanges)

  • Pressure rating derated for diameter (many large valves have lower max pressure than smaller siblings)

  • Disc material compatibility with fluid (especially for seawater or chemicals)

  • Seat material temperature range (EPDM vs. Viton vs. PTFE)

  • ISO 5211 top flange matches your actuator (F14, F16, or F25 for large lines)

  • Lug or double-flanged body for end-of-line or vacuum service (wafer is not suitable)

  • Shipping and handling plan (large valves require specialized packaging)

Conclusion

For large-diameter pipelines, the economic and practical case for butterfly valves is overwhelming. Their dramatic weight reduction, cost advantages (50-80% vs. alternatives), compact footprint, and automation practicality make them the default choice for engineers and procurement professionals worldwide.

Kinko offers a complete range of large-line butterfly valves from DN300 to DN1200, available in wafer, lug, and double-flanged configurations. Every valve features ISO 5211 mounting for seamless actuator integration and is backed by our application engineering team for torque and flow analysis.

Request a quote for your large-line project or contact our large-diameter valve specialists for sizing assistance.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q: What is the maximum diameter butterfly valve Kinko offers?
A: Kinko manufactures butterfly valves up to DN1200 (48 inches) as standard. Larger diameters (up to DN2000 / 80 inches) are available on special order for water and wastewater applications.

Q: Can a wafer-type butterfly valve be used on a large line without downstream flanges?
A: No. Wafer-type valves rely on compression between two flanges. For end-of-line service or systems requiring isolation during maintenance, specify lug-type or double-flanged bodies.

Q: How do I manually operate a large butterfly valve if the actuator fails?
A: Kinko large-line valves include a manual override handwheel on the gear operator (for valves DN200 and above). Direct manual operation without a gear operator is impractical above DN150 due to dynamic torque.

Q: Are large butterfly valves suitable for steam service?
A: Yes, but only with metal seats or high-temperature PTFE. Standard EPDM or NBR seats are limited to <120°C. For saturated steam up to 200°C, specify our Kinko high-performance (double offset) series with graphite or PTFE seats.

Q: How long does a large butterfly valve last in municipal water service?
A: With proper material selection (ductile iron body, SS316 disc, EPDM seat), a Kinko large-line butterfly valve typically exceeds 20-30 years of service life in potable water applications.



Ivan (Mobile:+86-18968769287)
          WhatsApp:+86-13579991606

Wechat:+86-18968769287

Website:www.kinko-flow.com
ZHEJIANG KINKO FLUID EQUIPMENT CO.,LTD


Home
Products
Contact