It is really quite simple--the fluid doesn't care a bit about diameter. It is flowing through an area and down a length.
When you do the area calcs you see that each standard size is in the universe of twice the flow area of the next smaller size, so:
- two 2" is about the same as a 3" (8*π/4 vs 9*π/4)
- two 3" is about the same as a 4" (18 vs. 16)
- two 4" is about the same as a 6" (32 vs. 36)
- two 6" is about the same as an 8" (72 vs 64)
- two 8" is about the same as 10" (128 vs 100)
If you are doing bigger pipe than that then you don't have any business going by this rule of thumb.
In your example if you have two 4.75 inch ID lines manifolded together, they should discharge into a mythical 6.7 inch ID line (call it 8").
Oh, by the way, two seemingly identical lines will never have exactly the same pressure drop. A bit of debris, some slime, a touch of corrosion will cause one line to be more resistant to flow at the microscopic level and cause flow inequities. I always figure that if two similar lines are withing 20% of each other I'm ahead of the game.
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
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