New valves are likely to be NFP soon and anyway, if they are available they are very expensive.
This is a typically corroded one, showing the green O ring just peeping out as pointed to by the arrow.

I have a lot of these and today I set about seeing if they could be recovered and made good again. I may have succeeded...
This is a really bad one where the hexagon has almost completely corroded away. This is the innards of the valve after the coil and shuttle, slug and springs have been removed.

First job was to machine off the corrosion until it was just gone.

Leaving a nice circle of clean metal...

The diameter of this circle was very carefully measured and a replacement ring machined from alloy bar stock. The outer diameter was set to that of the original hexagon (24mm) and the inner bored to just a tad under the diameter of the cleaned-up valve body...

The end result of the machining was a ring 4.5mm thick...

This was carefully fitted over the cleaned-up circle on the valve body...

The valve reassembled...

And installed onto a spare Hydractive Sphere Block...

And there it is, one electrovalve that should be good to go again. I'm looking for a guinea pig locally to try it on but before doing so I shall seal the new ring onto the valve body with some strong bearing retainer adhesive and treat it to some new O rings.
Any I do in future I'll make the new ring a heat-shrunk fit and I think then no adhesive will be needed.
It may not work but as the valve was scrap anyway it is worth a go...