VICKERS DG4V-3-6C-M-KUP8-D2-G7-60-EN652-A15

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
Flow Rate1
80 litre per minute
ICC
IV Directional Control Valves
Language
English
Net Pack Quantity Units
EA
Product Width
1.84
Seal Material
Buna-N
Special Features
None
Supplier Part Number
02-395404
Wattage
30
Product Weight
4.80 lbs

Product Questions & Answers

i’ve got a Vickers directional valve already, is this one meant for the same kind of job or is it something different
Question by: Carl R on Jul 7, 2025, 7:03 AM
In a hydraulic system, this part falls under IV directional control valves, so it is used to control hydraulic flow direction. The application list points to industrial equipment like presses, machine tools, die casting and foundry systems, marine and offshore setups, and turbine control, so it fits the same general type of directional control work in those kinds of machines.
Answer by: Customer Support on Jul 9, 2025, 6:10 AM
What kind of machines would this directional valve typically be used on?
Question by: Gene W on Feb 21, 2026, 11:05 AM
Common applications for this Vickers DG4V-3-6C-M-KUP8-D2-G7-60-EN652-A15 valve include die casting and foundry equipment, machine tools, marine and offshore systems, presses, primary metal processing, paper mills, test equipment, simulation setups, and turbine control systems for wind, steam, and water.
Answer by: Customer Support on Feb 22, 2026, 7:04 PM
Flow rate on this valve is listed at 80 liters per minute. That enough to handle press applications without choking the circuit?
Question by: Melvin A on Aug 31, 2025, 6:09 PM
For press applications, 80 liters per minute is a solid working capacity on a valve this size. The DG4V-3-6C is a well-established directional control valve in that class, and press work is one of the listed application types it's built around. As long as your system demand stays within that flow ceiling, you shouldn't run into restriction issues under normal press cycling conditions.
Answer by: Customer Support on Sep 2, 2025, 8:58 AM