A number of important points:
[ul]
[li]There is no equation for velocity if you don't know volume flow rate.[/li]
[li]There is no closed form equation for volume flow rate at arbitrary conditions.[/li]
[li]You need to pick one of the empirical equations for volume flow rate (e.g., AGA, Panhandle, Weymouth, Isothermal, etc) that comes closest to your conditions.[/li]
[li]Most empirical equations will give you volume flow rate at standard conditions. This is a seed number for velocity, but not a determinant number.[/li]
[li]You have to convert volume flow rate at standard conditions to volume flow rate at actual conditions.[/li]
[li]Once you have volume flow rate at actual conditions then you can simply divide it by the cross sectional area of the pipe to get an average velocity at that point.[/li]
[li]Since velocity is zero at the pipe walls (i.e. the "no flow boundary"), you can make a number of assumptions and determine the maximum velocity which will always occur some distance from the pipe walls but not necessarily at the pipe centerline.[/li]
[/ul]
As LittleInch said, there are whole books written on the determination of fluid velocity, which is a key element in so many important calculations.
[bold]David Simpson, PE[/bold]
MuleShoe Engineering
In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. Galileo Galilei, Italian Physicist