PaulKraemer
Electrical
- Jan 13, 2012
- 155
Hi,
I have some air velocity measurements (in ft/min) that were taken/measured at the center of a rectangular duct. If I want to convert these measurements to CFM, is this simply a matter of multiplying the velocity by the area of the duct? Or is there more to it than this?
Basically, I am wondering if an air velocity measurement taken at the center of a rectangular duct is representative of the air velocity in the entire duct, or if you would expect the velocity in the center of the duct to be faster (or slower) than the velocity towards the outside of the duct.
Thanks in advance,
Paul
I have some air velocity measurements (in ft/min) that were taken/measured at the center of a rectangular duct. If I want to convert these measurements to CFM, is this simply a matter of multiplying the velocity by the area of the duct? Or is there more to it than this?
Basically, I am wondering if an air velocity measurement taken at the center of a rectangular duct is representative of the air velocity in the entire duct, or if you would expect the velocity in the center of the duct to be faster (or slower) than the velocity towards the outside of the duct.
Thanks in advance,
Paul