Component-level rebuild
Pilot stage, spool, coil, seal, and connector work. Each unit is opened and inspected; failed components are replaced individually.
Industrial Valve Repair
Independent third-party industrial valve repair for hydraulic servo, proportional, cartridge, and directional control valves on heavy-industrial machines. Component-level rebuild, bench testing, donor parts service, and cross-brand sourcing across 20+ valve brands. Working on this hardware since 1975.
Services
The shop is structured around the same handful of jobs whether it's a 1970s servo on a steel-mill press or a current proportional on a CNC line. Lead time depends on the unit and donor parts availability.
Pilot stage, spool, coil, seal, and connector work. Each unit is opened and inspected; failed components are replaced individually.
Hagen-Busch hydraulic test stand for current and CANbus-capable valves, plus older-style stands for legacy hardware. Documented procedures by family.
19,000+ unit in-house pool. When the OEM no longer stocks parts for older valves, the shop pulls from donor units that come through.
If a rebuilt match is on the shelf, customers can trade in the failed unit for a discount on the rebuilt one.
If your specific valve is beyond economic repair, we suggest a comparable cross-brand option that drops in.
Component-level board repair on proportional and servoproportional valves with integrated driver electronics. LVDT and feedback channel verification.
In the Shop
The shop opens valves down to the spool, lap surface, and pilot stage. Donor parts come from a 19,000+ unit in-house pool accumulated since 1975, and spool restoration happens on the in-house machining setup when replacement parts are not available from the OEM.
Each repaired valve is checked on the hydraulic stand before it ships. Flow, pressure gain, response, null, and leakage all verified against documented procedures for the family. Performance graphs and detailed test data are available on request.
Where Industrial Valves Live
The same servo and proportional valves move between very different machines. The shop has worked across these heavy-industrial application contexts since 1975.
Roll-force proportional valves on rolling mills and process-line hydraulics.
Force-control valves on stamping, forming, and metal-shaping press lines.
Injection speed, clamp pressure, and core-positioning valves on molding machines.
Axis positioning and tool-feed servo valves on machining centers and grinders.
Paper-machine roll-position valves and pulp-line hydraulic control.
Construction equipment, marine, and heavy mobile hydraulic valves.
Steam and gas turbine governor valves, power generation hydraulic control.
Sawmill positioner valves, edger drives, and band-saw feed-rate hydraulics.
Bench Verification
Repaired valves are checked on the hydraulic stands before they leave. Flow, pressure gain, response, null, and leakage all verified against documented procedures for the family.
Send a Part NumberBrands
Top valve brands seen on industrial hydraulics. Click through for the dedicated brand page.
For the full directory of 20+ brands, see the valve repair hub.
Workflow
Same four-step path through the shop whether the unit is a discontinued 1970s industrial valve or a current production proportional with onboard electronics.
Call or email with the part number, machine context, and a photo of the nameplate if it helps.
Tech opens the valve, inspects spool and pilot stage, and runs it on the hydraulic stand to confirm what failed.
We call back with the cost and a rough turnaround. Nothing is started without your sign-off.
Failed components replaced from inventory or off donors, the valve verified under pressure, and shipped back.
FAQ
Service-level questions. For brand-specific FAQs, see the dedicated brand page or the valve hub.
Servo valves, proportional directional valves, cartridge and logic valves, pressure control valves, flow control valves, and standard solenoid directional valves. Hardware off heavy-industrial hydraulics: presses, mills, machine tools, molding machines, and process equipment.
No. We focus on hydraulic valves and electronic drives. We do not repair hydraulic pumps. If your valve job involves pump-side work, that stays with your pump shop or in-house team.
The shop is bench-based; customers ship units in and we ship them back. We do not run an on-site field-service team. For most industrial repairs, sending the unit in is the practical path.
If the valve is not fixable, we will let you know and help source a replacement: a rebuilt match if we have one on the shelf, or a comparable cross-brand alternative.
Each repaired valve is bench-tested before it ships. Performance graphs and detailed test data are available on request.
One year on parts and workmanship for repairs and rebuilt units. Standard exclusions apply for contamination, improper installation, and out-of-spec operation.
More from NC Servo
Industry-specific machine pages, the broader valve and drive hubs, and technical reading on testing and failure causes.
Full directory of 20+ valve brands with dedicated pages, plus deeper category coverage.
Component-level board work on servo drives, amplifiers, and motion controllers.
Industry-specific hub for valve and drive repair on injection molding machines.
Broader services overview combining valve, drive, and electronic control work.
When component-level repair makes sense versus buying new or rebuilt.
Contamination, hardened seals, blown coils, and the most common failure modes.
Plain-English explainer on what's inside an electrohydraulic servo valve and why these units come in for repair.
How proportional and servoproportional valves differ from true servo valves, what's inside, and what gets done at the bench.
Give us a call or send a part number. We'll check the donor pool, suggest a rebuilt match if we have one, and walk through repair or cross-brand options if we don't.