Replacement hydraulic valves for industrial trash compactors — directional control, pressure relief, check, solenoid, flow control, and spool valves. Every valve type used in a compactor hydraulic system, in OEM-equivalent specs. Drop-in for Marathon, PTR, Wastequip, Harmony, and SP Industries.
Hydraulic valves are how the compactor controls force, direction, and timing. Directional control valves route hydraulic oil to and from the ram cylinder. Pressure relief valves cap the system pressure at a safe maximum. Check valves prevent backflow. Solenoid valves switch under electrical control. Flow control valves regulate cycle speed. Spool valves combine multiple functions in one housing.
Most valve failures trace to contamination — particles in the hydraulic oil score the valve seat, the valve doesn't seal properly, the compactor cycles unreliably. PRT stocks every common valve type used in industrial compactor service, plus valve repair kits (springs, seals, spools) for when the housing is still good.
Identify the valve by function (directional, relief, check, solenoid, flow control), nominal flow rating (in gallons per minute), pressure rating, and port size (NPT or SAE). Most compactor valves are standardized — PRT can match exact specs.
If you're replacing a valve that failed from contamination, also change the hydraulic oil filter and consider a system flush. Otherwise the new valve fails the same way.
Directional control valve seat damage from oil contamination. Particles in the oil score the valve seat, the valve doesn't seal completely, and the ram drifts or cycles incompletely. Cleaning the oil and replacing the valve usually fixes it.
Yes, within the valve's rated range. The setscrew on top adjusts the spring tension and therefore the trip pressure. Always verify with a hydraulic pressure gauge — don't trust the dial markings alone.
Most are. The major industrial valve standards (NFPA D03, D05, D08 footprints, cartridge thread standards) are followed across brands. PRT can match exact specs by flow rating, pressure rating, and physical mounting.
Combines multiple functions in one housing — typically directional control + pressure relief. The spool inside the valve body slides to direct flow; the integrated relief protects the system. Common in self-contained compactor circuits.
Three signs: ram drifts under load, ram doesn't hold position with the motor off, and the hydraulic system overheats during normal operation. Pressure-test the cylinder to confirm — if pressure drops when the system isolates, the check valve isn't sealing.