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Check valve

Short definition

A check valve is a one-way valve that permits flow in one direction only — opens automatically under forward pressure, closes automatically under reverse pressure. No external operator. Common applications include sump-pump discharges, well-pump suction lines, and the inlet of a pressure tank.

What it is

The check valve has a single moving element — a disc, ball, or piston — that’s pushed open by forward flow and pushed closed by reverse flow. No handle, no power, no operator. It’s the simplest possible automatic valve.

Common types:

  • Swing check. Hinged disc that swings open under flow and closes under reverse flow. Low pressure drop when open. Direction-dependent (must be installed with the hinge axis horizontal so gravity helps the disc close).
  • Spring-loaded check. Disc held against the seat by a small spring. Works in any orientation. Faster closure than swing — preferred where reverse-flow events would otherwise cause water hammer.
  • Ball check. Free-floating ball that seats on an O-ring. Low capacity; used in low-flow specialty applications.
  • Foot check (foot valve). A spring or disc check at the suction inlet of a well pump, with a screen to keep debris out. Holds the pump prime between cycles.
  • Tilting-disc, lift, piston, stop check. Industrial variants for special service.

The big-picture distinction: check valves are automatic and one-way. Manual valves (gate, ball, globe) require operator action and are two-way. Both can shut off flow; only checks shut off reverse flow without intervention.

Why it matters to a homeowner

Check valves matter where reverse flow would be a problem:

  • Sump-pump discharge. Without a check valve, the lifted column of water siphons back into the pit when the pump stops, the pit refills with the same water, and the pump runs again — a “runs but doesn’t pump down” symptom.
  • Well-pump suction (foot valve). Without it, water in the suction pipe drains back into the well overnight, the pump loses prime, and it can’t restart in the morning.
  • Toilet fill valve. Has a small built-in check that prevents backflow into the supply if pressure inverts.
  • At-meter dual check. Some WA water utilities install a dual-check valve at every residential meter as containment protection — keeps any potential homeowner-side cross-connection out of the public main.

A failed check valve usually shows up indirectly: water keeps cycling through a pump, a fixture refuses to refill, or a backflow inspection fails. Replacement is straightforward in most cases — a $20–$80 part plus 30–60 minutes of labor in accessible locations.

Common variants and what a check valve isn’t

  • Check valve vs. gate / ball / globe valve. Check is automatic and one-way; the others are manual and two-way.
  • Swing vs. spring check. Swing has a hinged disc and depends on orientation; spring has a spring-loaded disc and works in any direction.
  • Single check vs. dual check. Dual-check has two checks in series for redundancy (ASSE 1024). Required by some utilities at the meter.

Common failure modes

  • Disc, O-ring, or spring degradation — slow reverse leak.
  • Debris caught at the seat — won’t fully close.
  • Slam-induced fatigue on swing checks under rapid reverse-flow events.
  • Stuck-open from corrosion or scale buildup.