Vickers DG4V 3 6C H M U BL6 60

Description & Features

Designed for three- or four-way directional control in demanding industrial hydraulic circuits, the Vickers DG4V 3 6C H M U BL6 60 is a single-stage directional control valve rated for flow up to 80 litres per minute. Buna-N seals make it well suited for standard hydraulic fluid compatibility across a wide range of service conditions.

This valve mounts on industry-standard surfaces and is applicable across a broad range of sectors, including machine tool, press, marine/offshore, die casting and foundry, primary metal, paper, test equipment and simulation, and turbine control for wind, steam, and water installations. The DG4V-3 series is available in thousands of model configurations, providing flexibility for varied circuit requirements without custom engineering.

SKU: 02-319614

Supplier Part Number (MPN): 02-319614

Alternate Part Numbers: DG4V36CHMUBL660

Specifications

Alternate Part Numbers
Alternate Part Number DG4V36CHMUBL660, Alternate Part Number MINO-00900X01435
Application
Die casting & foundry, Machine tool, Marine/Offshore, Press, Primary metal, paper, Test equipment & simulation, Turbine control (wind, steam, water)
Brand
Danfoss (Power Solutions II LLC)
Brand
Vickers
Pack Size
1.00
UOM
EA
Features
Three- or four-way directional control|Easily mountable on industry-standard surfaces|Thousands of models to suit all applications
Flow Rate1
80 litre per minute
ICC
IV Directional Control Valves
Language
English
Net Pack Quantity Units
EA
Product Width
1.88
Seal Material
Buna-N
Special Features
None
Sub Brand
Vickers
Supplier Part Number
02-319614
Product Weight
4.00 lbs

Product Questions & Answers (1)

Question by: Gene M on May 27, 2025, 7:14 AM
Flow rate on this one says 80 litres per minute, that enough for a press application or should I be lookin at something bigger?
Answer by: Customer Support on May 28, 2025, 9:30 PM
For most press circuits, 80 litres per minute is plenty. Press applications are listed right in the intended use for this valve, so it's built with that kind of duty in mind. If your system is running well under that ceiling, you're in good shape. Just make sure your circuit demand doesn't push consistently close to the rated max, and you'll get reliable directional control out of it.