Most valve selection mistakes come from the same root cause: someone tried to use one valve to do two jobs. A globe valve gets installed for shutoff because it's already there. A ball valve gets used for throttling because it's cheap. Both decisions cost more in the long run than picking the right tool from the start.
The first question isn't "what type of valve?" — it's "what does the process actually need this valve to do?"
Two jobs, two different valves
Industrial valves do one of two basic jobs:
- Modulation (control): hold a flow, pressure, level, or temperature at a setpoint by continuously adjusting how open the valve is. The valve spends its life at intermediate positions.
- Isolation (on/off): stop or start flow completely. The valve spends its life either fully open or fully closed.
The reason this distinction matters is that the two jobs put completely different demands on the valve. A control valve needs precise flow characteristics, good rangeability, and trim that survives partial-open operation. An on/off valve needs tight shutoff, low pressure drop when open, and a body that doesn't fight the flow.
A few valve types are flexible enough to do both adequately. Most aren't — and that's where selection problems come from.
The four major types in 30 seconds
Globe
Linear stem, plug-and-seat trim. Built for throttling. Excellent control characteristics, predictable Cv at every position, easy to retrofit different trim styles.
Ball
Quarter-turn ball through the bore. Tight shutoff, low pressure drop, fast actuation. Standard ball trim is poor for control — the flow characteristic is non-linear and erosion-prone at partial open.
Butterfly
Quarter-turn disc on a shaft. Compact, low-cost, low pressure drop. High-performance and triple-offset versions can do control duty; standard wafer butterflies cannot.
Gate
Linear wedge or parallel-slide. Built for full open or full closed — never throttle a gate valve. Vibration and seat damage happen fast at partial open.
The decision framework
Step 1: What is the valve doing?
Be honest about it. "It needs to control flow but also act as a block valve when we're down for maintenance" is two valves, not one. Specify both and stop trying to make a single valve heroic.
Step 2: What's the operating envelope?
Pressure, temperature, fluid, ΔP, and flow range. These determine which body styles even qualify before you start picking.
- High ΔP / cavitating service: globe with anti-cavitation trim, multi-stage, or specialty severe-service control valve. Ball and butterfly are out.
- Low ΔP, large pipe: butterfly is usually right. Globe is overkill and expensive at large sizes.
- Slurry or particulates: consider full-port ball or knife gate. Globe trim will erode.
- High-cycle on/off: ball with hard-faced trim or specialty severe-service ball.
Step 3: How precise does the control need to be?
If the process needs ±1% control accuracy, you need a globe with proper trim characterization (equal-percentage or linear, depending on the loop). If ±10% is fine, a high-performance butterfly or characterized ball might work and save you serious money.
Step 4: Shutoff requirement
API and ANSI define leakage classes from Class II (loose) through Class VI (bubble-tight). If you need Class V or VI shutoff — typical for hazardous service or environmental — globe valves with metal seats can do it but require careful selection. Ball valves with soft seats hit Class VI easily but soft seats limit temperature. The trade-off is real and worth thinking about before the spec is locked.
The "use one valve for both jobs" trap
It happens constantly: a project tries to save money or space by using one valve for both control and isolation. The usual outcomes:
- Globe valve as a block valve. Globes have inherent leakage past the seat — they're designed to throttle, not seal hard. You'll get leak-by during turnarounds and a maintenance crew that's unhappy.
- Ball valve as a control valve. Standard ball trim erodes quickly at partial open. The seat takes the brunt of the flow, and within a few thousand cycles you've got noisy operation and degraded shutoff.
- Butterfly as severe-service control. Disc cavitation, vibration, shaft fatigue. The cost savings on the body get eaten ten times over in repairs.
The right pattern is usually a control valve plus a block valve in series. Yes, it's two pieces of equipment. It also lasts longer, controls better, and lets you maintain the control valve without taking down the line.
Sizing the control valve?
Run your conditions through our Cv calculator — handles liquid, gas, and steam with ISA-75 corrections and choked flow detection.
Quick decision matrix
- Tight modulation, variable ΔP: globe, equal-percentage trim, with a separate block valve.
- Modulation at large diameter, low ΔP: high-performance or triple-offset butterfly, characterized.
- Coarse modulation, modest precision: characterized ball valve.
- On/off, fast cycle, tight shutoff: ball valve, full-port.
- On/off, large pipeline, infrequent operation: gate or butterfly.
- Severe service (cavitation, flashing, high noise): specialty severe-service control valve. Don't compromise on this one.
The bottom line
Pick the valve type that matches the job, not the budget. A correctly specified control valve plus a separate block valve will outlive and outperform a single compromise valve every time — and the total cost over a 10-year service life is usually lower.
If you're staring at a spec and unsure whether to call out one valve or two — or which body style fits the service — send us the conditions. We'll walk through the trade-offs with you and recommend a configuration that won't come back to bite you.