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Varivalve Adjustable Angle Air Valve

Brand:
Varivalve
SKU:
VAAV
Rating:
(100)
Q&A:
(2)
Varivalve Adjustable Angle Air Valve
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$27.54 each
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In Stock
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Product Highlights

Product Highlight: Size
1/8"
Product Highlight: System Type
Steam
Product Highlight: Max Temp (F)
240°F Max Temp
Product Highlight: Material
Brass
Product Highlight: Body Pattern
Angle
Product Highlight: Mount
Angle

Description

Note: This has a 1/8" Threaded Connection Size

The venting capacity of radiator air vents and main line air vents used in single pipe steam heating systems has an important effect on the operation of these systems. In order to obtain a better understanding of these effects, The Center for Energy and Environment conducted experiments both in the laboratory and in the field to investigate the properties of single pipe steam air venting.

Commercially available radiator and main line air vents were tested and compared. Main line air vents in one building were replaced with open pipe orifices of different sizes, and the resulting fill characteristics of the main steam lines were observed.

The purpose of the main line air vent is to rapidly vent the relatively large quantity of air in the main lines. This allows the main lines to fill more quickly and thus reduces the time difference of steam arrival at the different risers. A larger orifice allows the air to be pushed out at a lower back pressure.

The function of the radiator air vent is to provide a means for air to be driven out of the radiator as steam enters. At a given pressure the fill time of a radiator varies proportional to its heat capacity and inversely proportional to the venting capacity of the radiator air vent.

It is possible to control the speed at which a radiator will fill with steam by installing a radiator air vent with a certain venting capacity. Used in this manner, radiator air vents are helpful in evening out the heat distribution in a building.

Adjustable valves can be installed anywhere in your home and adjusted based on the distance from the valve to the boiler.

Specs

Application:

Radiator Vent

Size:

1/8"

System Type:

Steam

Material:

Brass

Body Pattern:

Angle

Mount:

Angle

Adjustability:

Adjustable

Thread Type:

Male

Temperature Range (F):

140°F - 240°F

Max Temp (F):

240°F

Min Temp (F):

140°F

Thread Size:

1/8"

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Product Reviews

4.77 out of 100 reviews
96% would recommend this product
4.77
out of 100 Reviews
96% would recommend this product
WRITE A REVIEW
5 star
86%
4 star
9%
3 star
3%
2 star
0%
1 star
2%
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Most Liked Positive Review

Big difference!!!

I have an old house with a 1 pipe steam system. I had Hoffman 1A's on our radiators. They were always filling up with water, throwing the system out of whack and I was emptying valves every day in peak heating season. I hated steam heat. These are amazing, huge venting capacity and almost never clog up. The radiators heat faster and the boiler burns for a shorter cycle (saving $$). It takes a little time to adjust them to get even steam distribution through the house. I recommend them 100%. Change all your vents out though, if you leave a few of the Hoffman's or other vents in, those radiators will fill much slower that the others (smaller vent size). 1 valve was defective, [...]
VS

Most Liked Negative Review

Flawed Design

These vents are very good when they work. If you have a properly designed steam system that produces dry steam at a low pressure, you will be very happy with these. - Until they break, which some will. There is a copper bellows inside each vent containing a low-boiling-point liquid. These expand when heated, closing the valve. The problem is that these bellows are mounted to the top of the vent and they detach, falling onto the seat, permanently closing the valve after about a year. We've installed a hundred or more of these, with perhaps 15% failing in less than a year. We opened them and noted the problem, informing the manufacturer. We're engineers, so we thought they would be interested. No reply from them, no replacement. They just don't care. Save your money and buy a Gorton valve. More simple design with 100% reliability and a lifetime of venting. Sorry, Heat Timer. We wanted to like your product!
Showing 1-10 of 100 reviews

Good product

Works well and easy to install.
Mac
NJ
5 months ago
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Would buy again

With all the HVAC, there is not too many steam radiators in my area anymore. Used this style a few times and no issues yet.
SP&H
New Jersey
5 months ago
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YES!

Great works as described
Happy
New York
5 months ago
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Work as expected

These valves work perfectly for my older home as It would be near impossible to completely insulate properly. I use Gortons on my mains and these on the radiators. As the outside temperature can be anywhere from 40 degrees to 6 degrees I can open up the lower floor ones to satisfy the thermostat preventing overheating upstairs during extremely cold weather. Along with the dry steam and efficient boiler they make the radiators produce extremely quiet heat, to the point that I can't tell if the furnace is running or not.
Doug
Nj
7 months ago
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All Good.

After replacing many HomeDepot type steam radiator leaking vents the vari Varivalves work the best.
JJDC
New York
11 months ago
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Purchased and got more

I use this valve on radiators that are hard to heat
Ted
Nj
1 years ago
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Nice adjustable vent

We used it son a radiator that wasn't getting hot
Td
Nj
1 years ago
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Good product

I have gone from the old style valve to the varivalve in my house first and loved them no problems. Next was the 2nd floor on my rental property and then the 1st floor. My daughter had one radiator that wasn't heating so I installed a varivalve and today she asked me to replace the rest of her old valves
Sparks
Holyoke, Mass
1 years ago
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Wide Range Problem Solver

If one knows and understands steam heating systems, the Heat Timer Vari-Valve is a remarkable device. The venting capacity rivals some main vents and is adjustable to below 15%. Solid brass construction, these have a certain heft that speaks of durability. When I help others solve steam radiator problems, Heat Timer Vari-Valves are my go-to. A caution, you need dry steam, true of most any steam system. If you do not solve a wet-steam issue, these will spit like angry llamas. But a dry steam system, these are difficult to top.
Brad
Boston, MA
2 years ago
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Best air bleed valves

Best air bleeds for old steam radiator systems. Have used in multi-story buildings and private homes and never had an issue.
OldIron
NYC
2 years ago
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Product Q&A

2 Questions
2 Questions
ASK A QUESTION

Q: Where should I set the valves for this situation? 3 small bedrooms upstairs, 1 large living rm/dining rm main floor. Thermostat on main floor. I am looking for a balance of heat because it's always way too warm upstairs than down. So much more than "heat rises" can explain.

Asked by Rick 12 years ago

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Would help to know how the vent valves are set now. But in general you need to slow the venting upstairs and speed up the venting downstairs. In other words, the vents upstairs should be closed a bit and the vents downstairs opened a bit. It will take a few tries to get the balance right

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Hello. A solution to your problem could take a bit of trial-and-error and tinkering. Most issues with single-pipe steam heat have the opposite problem - upstairs rooms remain cold while first-floor rooms are warm. If you go with the Varivalve, I would try opening the vent all-the-way on the radiator on your main floor closest to your thermostat. This will cause that radiator to heat up very quickly and trigger the thermostat to stop your boiler's cycle when the set-temperature is reached. For your radiators in the three bedrooms upstairs, I would close the Varivalve vents half-way at first in order to slow down the rate at which those radiators heat up. If the bedrooms get too cold, you'll need to experiment a bit in order to get the right balance. Eventually, you'll find the right combination between changing the vent settings. Just remember...the more that you open the vent, the quicker the radiator will purge air and the faster it will heat up.

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Would help to know how the vent valves are set now. But in general you need to slow the venting upstairs and speed up the venting downstairs. In other words, the vents upstairs should be closed a bit and the vents downstairs opened a bit. It will take a few tries to get the balance right

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-

I assume you have steam heat. I don't know if the valves will help. Maybe a matter of having too big/many radiators upstairs and too small/few downstairs. You can try setting all the upstairs valves to the fully closed position and all the downstairs valves to the fully open position. That is supposed to bring that steam to the "open" radiators faster, but I have not noticed that much control of the heat when I've tried to change the openness on mine. Sorry couldn't be more help.

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Q: How do adjust for maximum heat ?

Asked by Rich 12 years ago

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At top of the unit, their is a sliding adjustment. Open max for fastest heat flow. Be aware adjusting this to faster heat rise will slow other radiator from getting steams. Needs to balance setting for whole system to warm house up evenly.

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Hi. For this vent, simply move the slide all the way to the left for the most open setting. This will allow it to purge air at the fastest setting and for the radiator to warm up quickly. Do not use the maximum (most open) setting on radiators that are in the same room as your thermostat. You'll want those to get hot slowly in order for the radiators in the other rooms in your house to warm up first.

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