Dumb question time here guys. Yes I checked the archives.
I am trying to estimate head loss in a partially full pipe. Pipe pipe pipe, NOT a trapezoidal or rectangular channel or wood flume or etc. I have looked in all my references (Crane, Cameron, Marks, Lindeberg, Streeter & Wylie, etc.) but none _definitively_ say whether the Darcy equation, modified for hydraulic radius, is correctly applied to circular cross-sections, i.e. a pipe.
I assume the procedure is to calculate the velocity using Manning, and then use that in the Darcy equation with the hydraulic radius - yes? I got all kinds of examples in partially-full noncircular conduits. I am a round steel pipe guy though.
By the way, this is for design work for a new combined oily water/storm water/fire water sewer in a process plant. I am dropping 60' in elevation from my source (tank diked area) to my collection point (below-grade sump tank, 1200' away) so I am working on line sizes, head loss, estimating the potential for hammer events, etc. Thanks!
Thanks!
Pete
I am trying to estimate head loss in a partially full pipe. Pipe pipe pipe, NOT a trapezoidal or rectangular channel or wood flume or etc. I have looked in all my references (Crane, Cameron, Marks, Lindeberg, Streeter & Wylie, etc.) but none _definitively_ say whether the Darcy equation, modified for hydraulic radius, is correctly applied to circular cross-sections, i.e. a pipe.
I assume the procedure is to calculate the velocity using Manning, and then use that in the Darcy equation with the hydraulic radius - yes? I got all kinds of examples in partially-full noncircular conduits. I am a round steel pipe guy though.
By the way, this is for design work for a new combined oily water/storm water/fire water sewer in a process plant. I am dropping 60' in elevation from my source (tank diked area) to my collection point (below-grade sump tank, 1200' away) so I am working on line sizes, head loss, estimating the potential for hammer events, etc. Thanks!
Thanks!
Pete