Informing & Supporting
Conditioning Air Professionals & the Industry
loader-image
Tampa, US
4:40 pm, August 19, 2025
weather icon 88°F

Introduction to SORIT Valves By Bryan Orr

Photo Courtesy of Parker/Sporlan

There are many brands and styles of evaporator pressure regulating valves (EPR), but none as common as the Parker/Sporlan SORIT and ORIT valves.

The diagram above clearly shows some of the common applications. An EPR or “hold back” valve maintains a set suction line pressure and, therefore, coil temperature. That is critical in situations where multiple evaporators of different design temperatures connect back to a shared suction header, common in grocery store refrigeration.

 

The EPR valve “holds back” pressure in the evaporator to a set pressure so long as there is a pressure differential between the evaporator coil and the shared suction header. The suction header must have a LOWER pressure than the lowest design pressure of any evaporator connected to it.

A SORIT valve is an EPR valve or ORIT (Open on Rise of Inlet Pressure) valve that also includes a solenoid stop.  The purpose of the solenoid stop is to prevent the defrost gas from entering the suction line and overheating/overloading the compressors when the defrost solenoid opens and back feeds the evaporator to defrost.

For a full and detailed explanation of ORIT and SORIT valves, you can read BULLETIN 90-20 from Parker/Sporlan.

—Bryan

P.S. — Matthew Taylor with Kalos Services made an entire video series about parallel racks, and Part 12 covers EPRs and SORIT valves. You can watch it at https://hvacrschool.com/videos/rack-refrigeration-cycle-part-12-epr/. His 6th Annual HVACR Training Symposium presentation was also about EPRs and how they affect the entire rack. Learn more about the symposium or purchase your virtual ticket at hvacrschool.com/symposium.

Co-Founder and President at Kalos Services, Bryan Orr has been involved in HVAC training for over 15 years. Bryan started HVAC School to be free training HVAC/R across many mediums, For Techs, By Techs.

Contact Bryan by emailing bryan@HVACRSchool.com

Visit https://hvacrschool.com – The place to learn some things you’ve forgotten along the way as well as remind you of some things you forgot to know in the first place.

FEATURES

EXPLORE MORE

Informing & Supporting
Conditioning Air Professionals
& the Industry