When a solenoid valve says "max operating pressure" - what does tha that mean?

Does this mean the valve will blow apart if you use more pressure? Or does it mean it simply won't open/close properly? Thank you.

Answer:
As stated before, this will mean leaks may occur. If they don't, then you're lucky. You should have a relief valve to ensure that your system doesn't see pressures at the minimum m.o.p. of all the equipment.
you will destroy the solenoid if you exceed that pressure. It won't blow apart, but it will leak.
The max operating pressure is the max pressure it can take before leaks occur. Of course if you exceed this by enough pressure you can have an explosion unless you have a pressure relief somewhere else in the system and it pops first and relieves pressure.
As indicated above. Additionally, valves will be rated for its "burst pressure", the pressure by which it will blow apart. This is especially important in applications where the pressure may be high enough to blow up valves.

The answers post by the user, for information only, FunQA.com does not guarantee the right.



More Questions and Answers:
  • What is the difference between square feet and feet sq. Are 4sq. ft. and 4 ft.sq. the same ?
  • 6 Lead DC Motors?
  • PLEASE HELP, which college would be better 4 electronics &communication TKM kollam OR MACE kothamangalam??
  • I want help in avr?
  • Can you put an elevator inside a two deck neoplan skyliner?
  • Proton led displays lyons georgia-question?
  • What is the importance of geology in: 1.foundation construction of dams,airports,bridges,and buildings?
  • Find the remaining six trigonometric function if seco= square root 5/4?
  • Is modbus ethrenet the same with ethernet alone? or are they different with each other?