
Spirax Sarco steam traps help remove condensate, air and other non-condensable gases from steam systems while minimising live steam loss and supporting condensate recovery back to the boiler house.
Use this page to compare steam trap types, including thermodynamic, ball float, balanced pressure thermostatic, bimetallic, fixed temperature discharge and inverted bucket designs, then move into steam trap selection, monitoring, surveys and standardised maintenance routes.
For most buyers, the core questions are practical: which steam trap type best fits the duty, when should steam trap monitoring be introduced, how should the installed trap population be managed, and where do connectors, surveys and condensate recovery fit. This page is structured to answer those questions quickly and then route you deeper into the right product family or support path.
What is a steam trap? A steam trap is an automatic valve that discharges condensate, air and other non-condensable gases from a steam system while helping prevent the escape of live steam. How do you choose a steam trap? Steam trap selection should be based on the duty rather than on connection size alone. Condensate load profile, start-up air release, differential pressure, backpressure, operating pressure, risk of waterhammer, ambient exposure and maintenance access all influence which trap family will perform best. Which steam trap types are most common? For most buyers, the first comparison is between thermostatic steam traps, mechanical steam traps and thermodynamic disc traps. Balanced pressure, bimetallic and fixed-temperature discharge designs serve different thermostatic duties, while ball float and inverted bucket types cover core mechanical steam trap applications. When should connectors, manifolds and trap stations be part of the decision? Maintenance strategy often changes the best route. Sites that want faster steam trap replacement and less on-site fabrication often standardise around Quick-Fit connectors, trapping stations and manifolds rather than treating every trap assembly as a one-off arrangement. Why do monitoring, surveys and management matter? A failed-open steam trap can waste steam continuously, while a failed-closed trap can create waterlogging, poor heat transfer and waterhammer. Survey-led steam trap management identifies the installed trap population, checks application and installation suitability, and uses in-operation testing to prioritise corrective work. Wireless monitoring adds continuous condition visibility so maintenance teams can detect failure trends earlier and respond with better prioritisation. Why does steam trapping connect to the wider system? Trap choice affects condensate drainage, flash steam generation, heat transfer stability, maintenance labour and the quality of condensate returned to the boiler house. For that reason, steam trap selection often sits alongside condensate recovery, pressure control and broader steam-system optimisation decisions.

Balanced pressure thermostatic steam traps operate below steam saturation temperature and suit duties where controlled sub-cooled discharge helps reduce flash steam losses.

Ball float steam traps provide continuous condensate drainage and strong air venting, making them a common route for ball float and float & thermostatic steam trap selection.

Bimetallic thermostatic steam traps discharge condensate below saturation temperature and are suited to applications where sensible heat recovery is beneficial.

Fixed temperature discharge steam traps use a liquid expansion device to discharge condensate at a preset temperature for thermostatic trap duties.

Inverted bucket steam traps are durable mechanical steam traps that operate at steam temperature and suit a wide range of general industrial duties.

Steam trap manifolds and insulation jackets help simplify installation, reduce heat loss and support cleaner maintenance arrangements around trap stations.

Sealed steam traps use all-welded construction to help prevent steam leakage, reduce maintenance effort and support long-term reliability.

Quick-Fit swivel connectors and steam traps make trap replacement faster, reduce installation complexity and help standardise steam trap maintenance.

Thermodynamic disc steam traps combine compact construction, robust operation and efficient condensate removal across a wide operating pressure range.
Steam trap selection becomes easier when the project starts with operating duty, air venting need, maintenance access and failure-detection strategy rather than with connection size alone. The main questions are whether the application needs continuous condensate discharge, compact all-round performance, controlled sub-cooled discharge or a maintenance route that is easier to standardise across the site.
| Route | Best fit when | Main priority | Next route |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thermodynamic disc steam traps | Steam mains, tracing or general high-pressure duty need compact and robust drainage | Durability and broad operating range | Browse thermodynamic steam traps |
| Ball float and F&T steam traps | Continuous condensate discharge and strong air venting matter most | Stable drainage for process and heat-transfer duties | Browse ball float steam traps |
| Balanced pressure and other thermostatic traps | Start-up air release and controlled sub-cooled discharge are major selection drivers | Thermostatic response and reduced flash steam loss | Browse balanced pressure steam traps |
| Inverted bucket and other mechanical traps | A durable mechanical design is preferred for general industrial duty | Mechanical trap performance and application fit | Browse inverted bucket steam traps |
| Monitoring and connector routes | Condition visibility or faster maintenance standardisation matters as much as trap family choice | Reduce steam loss and simplify maintenance execution | Explore monitoring and connectors |
Steam trap management is not only about replacing failed units. It starts with identifying the installed trap population, checking whether each trap is correctly selected and installed, and deciding where faster maintenance or continuous monitoring will create the biggest operational value.
| Need | Why it matters | Best next route |
|---|---|---|
| Steam trap surveys | Used when the installed trap population must be recorded, reviewed in operation and prioritised for corrective work. | Explore steam trap surveys and management |
| Wireless monitoring | Used when earlier detection of leaking or blocked traps matters more than periodic manual checking alone. | Explore wireless steam trap monitoring |
| Standardised trap stations | Used when the maintenance team needs faster change-out, less fabrication work and repeatable station layouts. | Browse swivel connectors and trap stations |
| Condensate recovery planning | Used when trap performance must be considered together with returned condensate value, flash steam control and wider boiler house efficiency. | Explore condensate and heat recovery systems |
A steam trap is an automatic valve that removes condensate, air and other non-condensable gases from a steam system while helping prevent the loss of live steam.
Ball float and float and thermostatic steam traps are commonly chosen where continuous condensate discharge and strong air venting are priorities, especially on process and heat-transfer duties.
Thermodynamic disc steam traps are often used for steam mains, tracing and other duties where compact size, durability and broad pressure capability matter more than continuous discharge behaviour.
Monitoring becomes valuable when the site needs earlier failure detection, reduced steam loss and a more proactive maintenance routine across a larger installed trap population.
Steam trap selection usually sits between trap type choice, maintenance planning, site-wide failure visibility and wider condensate-system performance. Use these routes when you need more than a product-family list.
Steam trap choice also affects condensate recovery, flash steam control and boiler house efficiency. Use this route when the wider condensate loop matters as much as the trap itself.
Move into monitoring when your priority is detecting leaking or blocked traps earlier, reducing steam loss and building a more proactive maintenance plan.
Read the engineering guidance when you need a steam trap selection guide covering operating conditions, trap characteristics and application fit before choosing a product family.
Go to the maintenance guidance when your next question is how to test steam traps, detect failure modes and build a more disciplined inspection routine.