What is a Servo Valve?

What is a Servo Valve?

A servo valve essentially defines a valve design with a bushing spool assembly that has high-precision metering edges. And basically, the name servo valve is related to the word servomechanism, which means that the valve is constantly monitored to control its movement. The name proportional describes any action where only one parameter varies somewhat in relation to the other. It is a continuously variable, electrically modulated, directional control valve with less than 3% center overlap. Servo valves are used in conjunction with closed-loop systems and advanced electronics. Servo valves operate with greater accuracy, very high repeatability, minimal hysteresis and high-frequency response. But servo valves are more expensive. A servo valve or pressure control valve is generally used to control the pressure in a circuit through a directional valve in some cases. A load cell or pressure transducer detects the force or torque. A servo amplifier analyzes the feedback signals from the sensors to control the valve. And servo valves are classified as A single-stage servo valve is a direct-regulated valve. A two-valve stage servo valve consists of a pilot stage and a final or main stage. Three-stage servo valves are similar, except that the pilot itself is a two-stage servo valve.

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