A 'normal' V-port ballvalve will have (as drawings sent in from others indicate) a preferred flow direction, indicated by an arrow, normally cast int the house. Please bear in mind that a V-port ball-valve has no full-bodied ball, but rather most often a shell, often not completly 360 degrees formed, and in addition with the V-notch as opening. The opening goes from shut valve through small to large part of the V exposed.
The preferred flow direction is, as far as I have seen, in all cases from 'inside' the body (against concave innerside of shell/ball) and out through the regulating V, and into the downstream pipeline. Several reasons:
-For especially floating ball/shell construction (and partly also trunnion mounted) this flow direction will help sealing by pressing ball/shell against the seat sealing.
- For regulating purposes this will send flow out into a straight pipeline, instead into a more irregular formed body, helping forming laminar in stead of turbulent flow.
- A V-port ball valve is constructed to regulate flow in a rather wide range, strengthening the reason for a straight pipeline some valvelengths after the valve.
- Also for distance and placing of flow measurement will soonest possible laminar flow contribute.