What is a bypass valve in hydronic HVAC systems?
A bypass valve in a hydronic system is a control valve that allows water to flow around part of the system instead of through it. It is used to maintain proper flow, pressure, and temperature stability when system demand changes.
Think of it as: A controlled “alternate water path” that keeps the system stable when coils or zones close.
What is a bypass valve used to do?
At a high level, a bypass valve helps maintain flow, stabilize pressure, and protect equipment when system conditions change.
- Maintain minimum flow through boilers or chillers
- Prevent pump dead-heading when control valves close
- Control differential pressure in variable flow piping systems
- Reduce noise and valve hunting at terminal units
- Stabilize system temperature by blending supply and return water
- Protect equipment from low-flow or high-pressure conditions
- Chilled water systems
- Hot water heating systems
- Boiler loops
- Primary/secondary pumping systems
- Older constant-flow systems with 2-way control valves
3-Way Control Valve Bypass
Blends supply water with return water. This configuration is commonly used in heating systems where temperature control is the main goal.
Sends water either through the coil or around it through a bypass path. This is common in older constant-flow systems and applications requiring minimum flow through a circuit.
Used in: Older constant-flow systems, bypass arrangements, and applications where maintaining minimum circuit flow is important.
Some Other Common Bypass Valve Configurations in Hydronic HVAC
Configuration: A simple manual balancing valve or globe valve set during commissioning and left in a fixed position.
Used in: Small systems or stable-load applications where operating conditions do not change significantly.
Manual bypass arrangements are often used where simplicity is preferred and the system does not require automatic adjustment as flow conditions change.
How Are Bypass Valves Used in Modern Systems?
Modern systems often use VFD-driven pumps and pressure-independent control valves (PICVs) to dynamically control flow based on actual system demand.
In many cases, bypass valves are reduced in size or eliminated entirely, and are only used as a safety measure or minimum-flow backup.
A bypass valve in hydronic HVAC is:
A valve that maintains safe flow and pressure by allowing water to circulate around part of the system when demand decreases.
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