Useful Pipe Engineering Formulas and Basics
Useful Pipe Engineering Formulas and Basics
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What is the velocity of 10 gpm going through a 1/2″ diameter schedule 40 pipe?
GPM = 10
Internal Area = 0.304 (see note below)
0.3208 X GPM / Internal Area = 0.3208 X 10 X 0.304 = 10.55 feet per second
Note: The outside diameter of pipe remains the same regardless of the thickness of the
pipe. A heavy duty pipe has a thicker wall than a standard duty pipe, so the internal
diameter of the heavy duty pipe is smaller than the internal diameter of a standard
duty pipe. The wall thickness and internal diameter of pipes can be found on readily
available charts.
Hydraulic steel tubing also maintains the same outside diameter regardless of wall
thickness.
Hose sizes indicate the inside diameter of the plumbing. A 1/2″ diameter hose has an
internal diameter of 0.50 inches, regardless of the hose pressure rating.
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Notes:
All these pneumatic formulas assume 68 degrees F at sea level
All strokes and diameters are in inches
All times are in seconds
All pressures are PSI.
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Flow Coefficient for Smooth Wall Tubing
Cv of Tubing =(42.3 x Tube I.D. x Tube I.D. x 0.7854 x (Square Root (Tube I.D. /
0.02 x Length of Tube x 12)
1.024 x Air Flow / (Square Root of (Pressure Drop x ((PSIG-Pressure Drop) + 14.7)))
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