| Feature | Specification |
| Product Model | D31FBB32EC4NF00 |
| Manufacturer | Parker Hannifin |
| Valve Type | Solenoid Operated Directional Control Valve |
| Nominal Size | NG10 / CETOP 05 |
| Max Operating Pressure | 350 bar (5000 PSI) |
| Max Tank Pressure | 210 bar (3000 PSI) |
| Max Flow Rate | 150 L/min (40 GPM) |
| Spool Type | 004 (Cylinder port blocked in center) |
| Solenoid Voltage | 24 VDC |
| Seal Material | Viton (Fluorocarbon) |
| Electrical Connection | DIN 43650 (Standard) |
📦 Warranty&Reture Policy:
🛡️ 1、One year warranty. If the product malfunctioned under proper usage per instructions manual within the warranty period, please contact us to obtain shipping instructions and send it back at your shipping costs.
🔍 2、14days evaluation and investigation takes placed after receiving yourreturn item.
❓What Is a Proportional Valve?
🔍Key Characteristics:
- Higher flow than a servo valve
- Lower bandwidth
- ️ More tolerant of dirtier oil
️🛡️A Solenoid-Driven Hydraulic Valve: Two Main Forms
1️⃣ Standard Proportional (Open-Loop)
- Feedback: No internal position feedback; if the spool is fighting a load, the position can drift.
- Performance: Bandwidth is modest (often < 50 Hz), but flow capacity is higher than a servo valve and the tolerance for dirty oil is better.
- Common Models:
- Atos: DHZO, DKZOR (without transducer)
- Bosch Rexroth: 4WRA
- Yuken: EFBG
2️⃣ Servoproportional (Closed-Loop)
- Feedback: Continuous position feedback
- Performance: Bandwidth is higher than a standard proportional, deadband is smaller, and accuracy is better.
- Common Models:
- Atos: DLHZO, DLKZOR
- Bosch Rexroth: 4WRPH, 4WRPEH, 4WREE
- Yuken: EHFBG
- Duplomatic: DXE
️
⚡Shared Skeleton & Bench Work
- A body bore with a spool inside
- Two solenoid coils on each end
- Centering springs
- Four hydraulic ports
- (On servoproportional variants) An LVDT and either an external driver card or onboard electronics (OBE)
The differences are in the feedback loop and the accuracy of the spool fit. However, bench work overlaps a lot. A burned coil is a burned coil. A worn spool is a worn spool. The differences primarily show up in the LVDT and OBE channels on servoproportionals (which do not exist on the standard variants).
The differences are in the feedback loop and the accuracy of the spool fit. However, bench work overlaps a lot. A burned coil is a burned coil. A worn spool is a worn spool. The differences primarily show up in the LVDT and OBE channels on servoproportionals (which do not exist on the standard variants).








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