Direct-Acting Pressure Protection • Spring Loaded Safety Valves
Full Lift Safety Valves Manufacturer for Boiler, Steam and High-Capacity Relief
Full lift safety valves are designed to reach a larger rated lift and provide high relieving capacity when system pressure reaches the specified relieving condition. They are commonly used in boiler, steam, marine boiler, gas, pressure vessel and selected cryogenic pressure relief applications where fast opening and certified capacity are critical.
ZOBAI supplies spring loaded full lift safety valves and full lift type safety relief valves with engineering support for set pressure, required relieving capacity, blowdown, seat material, body material, connection standard, back pressure, operating temperature and project documentation.
Valve Type: Full Lift / Spring Loaded / Boiler Safety Valve
Service: Steam / Gas / Vapor / Marine Boiler / Cryogenic
Key Checks: Set Pressure / Capacity / Lift / Blowdown / Back Pressure
Applications: Boiler / Pressure Vessel / Marine / Process Skid
Options: Lever / Closed Bonnet / Flanged / Threaded / Cryogenic Design
Docs: Datasheet / Test Report / Calibration Record / Material Certificate
Full lift safety valve selection should be confirmed against the actual medium, set pressure, operating pressure, required relieving capacity, full lift design, blowdown, temperature, material, connection, back pressure and applicable code requirements.
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Full Lift Safety Valves for High-Capacity Pressure Relief
Full lift safety valves are safety relief valves designed to achieve a larger valve lift and a higher discharge area than low lift designs. They are commonly used where rapid opening and certified relieving capacity are critical, including boilers, steam systems, pressure vessels, compressors, marine boiler systems, gas service and selected cryogenic pressure relief applications.
Why full lift design matters
A full lift safety valve is not simply a larger-looking valve. The term refers to the valve’s lift behavior and effective discharge capability. When pressure reaches the set pressure and the valve reaches its rated lift, the flow area must be sufficient to discharge the required relieving capacity under the specified overpressure condition.
In boiler and steam applications, a full lift type safety valve is often selected where a quick opening response and large relieving capacity are required. In process systems, the same selection must still consider medium, temperature, back pressure, inlet pressure loss, seat tightness, material compatibility and applicable code.
Selection boundary
Full lift safety valves are typically considered when the required relieving capacity is high, when steam or gas service requires fast opening, or when the protected equipment needs a certified discharge capacity within the permitted overpressure range. They are not selected only by inlet size, outlet size or spring range.
The valve must still be checked by set pressure, required relieving capacity, certified flow area, medium, temperature, back pressure and installation conditions.
How a Full Lift Safety Valve Works
A full lift safety valve remains closed during normal operation. When inlet pressure reaches the set pressure, the disc starts to lift. As pressure continues into the allowed overpressure range, the disc reaches a larger rated lift so the valve can achieve its certified relieving capacity. The design of the nozzle, disc, huddling chamber, spring, guide and blowdown arrangement affects opening, stability and reseating.
Closed Position
The spring keeps the disc on the seat while system pressure remains below set pressure.
Initial Opening
At set pressure, inlet pressure starts to overcome spring force and the disc begins to lift.
Full Lift
The valve reaches its rated lift, increasing discharge area and allowing the required capacity to be relieved.
Blowdown and Reseating
As pressure falls, the valve reseats within its blowdown range. Seat condition and back pressure affect closing behavior.
Key Design Points in a Full Lift Type Safety Valve
Full lift safety valve design should be reviewed as a complete pressure relief device. Lift height alone does not guarantee performance. The flow path, spring setting, nozzle geometry, disc movement, guide clearance and discharge piping must work together.
Lift, Orifice and Certified Capacity
Full lift performance depends on the relationship between disc lift, nozzle area, orifice designation and flow path. The valve should be selected by required relieving capacity, not by appearance or connection size.
A full lift safety valve with the same inlet size as another valve may have a different rated capacity depending on internal geometry, certification basis and discharge coefficient.
Spring Loaded Full Lift Safety Valve
Most industrial full lift safety valves are spring loaded designs. The spring determines the set pressure range and must remain stable under operating temperature, pressure cycling and service conditions.
For high-temperature steam or boiler applications, spring material, bonnet design, lifting lever, blowdown behavior and seat tightness should be reviewed carefully.
Seat, Disc and Blowdown Behavior
Seat and disc condition affect leakage, popping behavior and reseating. Full lift valves can discharge large flow quickly, but poor seat condition, dirt, vibration or back pressure may cause leakage or unstable closing.
Blowdown should be appropriate for the application. Too narrow a reseating range can lead to cycling, while excessive blowdown can cause unnecessary pressure loss.
Cryogenic Full Lift Safety Valve
Cryogenic full lift safety valves require additional review of low-temperature material toughness, seat material, bonnet configuration, insulation, ice formation risk and discharge direction.
A standard steam or air full lift safety valve should not be assumed suitable for LNG, liquid nitrogen, liquid oxygen or other cryogenic services without material and design confirmation.
Quick Full Lift Safety Valve Fit Check
Use this quick guide to identify what should be reviewed before ordering. It does not replace sizing calculation, capacity certification review or code verification.
Select your main service condition
Click one condition below to see the engineering checks that matter most.
Parameters That Decide Whether a Full Lift Safety Valve Is Suitable
Full Lift Safety Valve vs Low Lift Safety Valve
| Item | Full Lift Safety Valve | Low Lift Safety Valve |
|---|---|---|
| Lift behavior | Disc reaches a larger rated lift to provide higher discharge area. | Disc lift is more limited and discharge area is lower. |
| Best for | Boilers, steam systems, gas service and high-capacity relief duties. | Smaller capacity applications and selected compact pressure relief points. |
| Capacity focus | Often selected where certified relieving capacity is a key requirement. | Used where required relief flow is lower or system design allows lower discharge rate. |
| Opening response | Rapid opening behavior is common in steam and gas full lift designs. | Opening may be more limited depending on valve design. |
| Selection risk | Assuming full lift solves all capacity problems without sizing calculation. | Using low lift design where capacity demand requires full lift performance. |
| Engineering check | Set pressure, full lift capacity, blowdown, back pressure and material. | Capacity, lift limitation, set pressure and application suitability. |
Where Full Lift Safety Valves Are Used
Boiler and steam systems
Boiler full lift safety valves are selected where steam capacity, rapid opening, blowdown control and reliable reseating are critical. Steam service should confirm set pressure, capacity, lever requirement, seat material and discharge reaction force.
Marine boiler applications
Marine boiler full lift safety valves must consider vibration, space limitations, steam discharge direction, inspection access, material reliability and operating procedures for shipboard pressure equipment.
Gas and vapor pressure vessels
Full lift safety relief valves may be used on gas and vapor systems where the required relieving capacity is high. Selection should include gas properties, certified capacity, outlet back pressure and seat tightness.
Cryogenic pressure relief systems
Cryogenic full lift safety valves require low-temperature material review, extended bonnet or special design consideration, seat compatibility, insulation effect and safe discharge routing.
Full Lift Safety Valve Selection Table
| Service Condition | Common Requirement | Recommended Review | Key Engineering Check | Main Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boiler steam | Fast opening and high steam capacity | Boiler full lift safety valve | Set pressure, steam capacity, blowdown, seat material and lever | Insufficient capacity or unstable reseating |
| Marine boiler | Reliable relief under vibration and compact installation | Marine boiler full lift safety valve | Vibration, discharge direction, inspection access and material | Unsafe discharge or maintenance difficulty |
| Gas pressure vessel | Certified relieving capacity | Spring loaded full lift safety valve | Gas properties, orifice, back pressure and seat tightness | Selecting by connection size only |
| Cryogenic service | Low-temperature pressure protection | Cryogenic full lift safety valve | Low-temperature material, seat, bonnet, icing and discharge | Material embrittlement or seat leakage |
| Replacement project | Match existing valve performance | Nameplate and datasheet verification | Set pressure, capacity, orifice, lift type, connection and material | Replacing by brand or appearance only |
| Wholesale or batch purchase | Consistent model and documentation | Standardized full lift safety valve specification | Pressure range, material, certificates, testing and labeling | Mixing service conditions under one generic model |
This table is for preliminary engineering screening. Final selection must be confirmed against medium, set pressure, operating pressure, required relieving capacity, temperature, lift type, material, back pressure, connection standard and applicable code requirements.
Common Engineering Mistakes to Avoid
Assuming full lift means enough capacity
Full lift design indicates the valve can reach a larger lift, but it does not automatically prove the valve is sized correctly. The required relieving capacity, orifice area and certified capacity must still be checked.
Ignoring blowdown in boiler service
In boiler full lift safety valve applications, blowdown affects reseating behavior and system pressure recovery. Incorrect blowdown may cause excessive pressure loss or repeated valve cycling.
Replacing by old brand name only
Replacement inquiries may mention Bailey, LESER or other existing valve brands. Brand name alone is not enough. Nameplate data, set pressure, capacity, orifice, connection and material must be confirmed.
Full Lift Safety Valve Troubleshooting Table
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Engineering Check | Corrective Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Valve does not reach expected capacity | Wrong orifice, incorrect sizing basis, restricted inlet or high outlet resistance | Review required capacity, certified capacity, inlet pressure loss and back pressure | Recalculate sizing and select correct full lift model |
| Valve chatters during relief | Oversizing, excessive inlet loss, unstable flow or back pressure | Check inlet line, outlet piping, actual relief flow and valve size | Correct piping layout, review sizing and confirm valve configuration |
| Valve leaks after opening | Seat damage, dirt, thermal distortion or poor reseating | Inspect disc, seat, guide and operating pressure margin | Clean, repair, lap, retest and recalibrate as required |
| Valve opens at wrong pressure | Spring drift, wrong adjustment, damaged spring or incorrect calibration | Check set pressure test record, spring range and nameplate | Recalibrate, reseal and document according to procedure |
| Cryogenic valve freezes or leaks | Icing, material mismatch, seat shrinkage or unsuitable bonnet design | Review low-temperature material, bonnet, insulation and discharge layout | Select cryogenic-compatible design and verify installation details |
Standards and Documents to Confirm Before Purchase
Standards to review
Full lift safety valve specifications may reference boiler, pressure vessel, pressure relief, material and project-specific requirements. The correct standard depends on the protected equipment, medium, industry and country or region.
- ASME BPVC Section I where boiler safety valve requirements apply.
- ASME BPVC Section VIII where pressure vessel protection applies.
- API 520 for sizing, selection and installation guidance in process applications.
- API 526 where flanged steel pressure relief valve dimensions and orifice designations are relevant.
- API 527 when seat tightness testing is specified.
- ISO 4126-1 where safety valves for protection against excessive pressure are specified.
Documents buyers often request
Documentation should be confirmed before quotation, especially for boiler, marine boiler, cryogenic, pressure vessel and regulated equipment projects.
- Valve datasheet and model specification.
- Set pressure calibration record.
- Certified relieving capacity information.
- Material certificate and heat number traceability when required.
- Seat tightness test report when specified.
- Pressure test report, nameplate and tagging requirements.
- Replacement cross-reference data when replacing an existing valve.
RFQ Checklist for Full Lift Safety Valves
| Required Data | Why It Matters | Example Input |
|---|---|---|
| Medium | Determines sizing method, material and seat design. | Steam, air, natural gas, nitrogen, cryogenic gas |
| Set pressure | Defines the valve opening point. | 10 bar g, 150 psi, 600 psi |
| Operating pressure | Confirms operating margin and leakage risk. | 80% of set pressure or project value |
| Required relieving capacity | Confirms whether the valve can protect the equipment. | kg/h, lb/h, Nm³/h, SCFM |
| Application | Clarifies boiler, marine boiler, pressure vessel or cryogenic use. | Boiler steam, marine boiler, cryogenic tank |
| Connection standard | Ensures piping and installation compatibility. | Flanged, threaded, welded, ASME, EN, JIS |
| Material requirement | Prevents corrosion, temperature and low-temperature failure. | WCB, CF8M, low-temperature steel, alloy option |
| Seat material | Affects leakage, temperature and media compatibility. | Metal seat, soft seat, project specified |
| Back pressure | Affects capacity, stability and reseating behavior. | Atmospheric, silencer, header, variable back pressure |
| Applicable code | Defines testing, documentation and acceptance requirements. | ASME, API, ISO, marine class, project specification |
| Existing drawing or nameplate | Reduces replacement risk. | Photo, model, brand, set pressure, capacity, orifice |
Need Help Selecting a Full Lift Safety Valve?
Send us your medium, set pressure, operating pressure, relieving capacity, application, temperature, connection standard, material, seat requirement, back pressure and existing datasheet. Our engineering team can review whether a full lift safety valve or full lift type safety relief valve is suitable before quotation.
Prepare these data before RFQ
TECHNICAL INSIGHTS
Insights for Safer Valve Selection
FAQ
Full Lift Safety Valve FAQs for Working Principle, Design and Selection
What is a full lift safety valve?
A full lift safety valve is a safety relief valve designed to reach a larger rated disc lift and provide higher discharge capacity during an overpressure event. It is commonly used in boiler, steam, gas, pressure vessel and high-capacity pressure relief applications.
How does a full lift safety valve work?
A full lift safety valve remains closed below set pressure. When pressure reaches set pressure, the disc starts to lift. As pressure rises into the allowed overpressure range, the valve reaches full lift and discharges the required capacity. When pressure falls, the valve reseats within its blowdown range.
What is the difference between full lift and low lift safety valves?
A full lift safety valve reaches a larger rated disc lift and usually provides higher discharge capacity. A low lift safety valve has a more limited disc lift and is used for lower-capacity relief duties. The correct choice depends on required relieving capacity, medium, set pressure and applicable code.
Where are boiler full lift safety valves used?
Boiler full lift safety valves are used on steam boilers, steam drums, steam headers and utility steam systems where fast opening, certified steam capacity, blowdown control and reliable reseating are required.
Can full lift safety valves be used for cryogenic service?
They can be used in selected cryogenic applications if the design, material, seat, bonnet configuration and discharge arrangement are suitable for low-temperature service. A standard steam or air full lift safety valve should not be used for cryogenic service without engineering review.
Is a spring loaded full lift safety valve suitable for gas service?
Is a spring loaded full lift safety valve suitable for gas service?
How should I replace a Bailey or LESER full lift safety valve?
For replacement projects, provide the existing valve nameplate, model, set pressure, orifice, certified capacity, connection size, material, medium and service condition. Do not replace a full lift safety valve by brand name or appearance only.
What information is needed before requesting a full lift safety valve quotation?
Provide the medium, set pressure, operating pressure, required relieving capacity, application, temperature, connection standard, material requirement, seat type, back pressure condition, applicable code, quantity and any existing drawing or nameplate.
Raymon Yu
“When a safety valve fails to pop on site, it’s rarely because someone can’t read a standard. It’s usually because critical operating parameters (like backpressure or relief temperature) were assumed instead of specified. I reviewed the key technical content on this page to keep it practical, API/ASME spec-aligned, and RFQ-ready. (We prefer assumptions for lunch choices.)”
What I work on daily: reviewing drawings and project specs, supporting engineer-to-engineer questions, resolving capacity calculations, material selection, and backpressure impacts so production and quoting stay consistent. (Yes—set pressure and seat tightness test records get plenty of attention.)
