The effect of rising temperature on bimetallic elements operates the SH-2500 bimetallic steam trap. It adjusts to changing conditions because the curving of the bimetallic elements, caused by increasing temperature, compensates for increasing pressure. At start-up, the valve is wide open, which allows a large volume of non-condensables and cold condensate to be removed from the system. When the system reaches steam temperature, the elements become sufficiently hot to pull on the trap’s valve stem, closing the valve. The valve remains closed until the bimetallic elements cool, thus allowing the valve to crack open, venting the condensate and noncondensables, and then close again when steam temperature is reached.
The SH-2500 has a sealed, stainless steel body that is lightweight, compact and highly resistant to corrosion. It is adaptable to an Armstrong 360˚ Universal Connector or a Trap Valve Station (TVS). This makes it easy to install and replace, as the trap can be removed while the connector remains in-line. That means savings in labor cost and ultimate flexibility—because inverted bucket, thermostatic, thermostatic wafer, disc, and float and thermostatic steam traps can all be installed on the same connector.