Mike17650
Civil/Environmental
- Dec 20, 2001
- 6
A number of culvert design standards say that the maximum headwater depth is limited to 1.5 x diameter of the culvert. Can anyone explain the basis for this criteria?
We're designing a replacement culvert for an old 3-ft diameter culvert that collapsed. If we replace it with another 3-ft diameter pipe, the headwater will not overtop the road (not even close), but if we use the criteria that HW/D cannot exceed 1.5, then a 4-ft diameter pipe is needed. I've seen this design criteria in several publications, but haven't found any reasoning or justification for it. If anyone knows, I would appreciate an answer.
We're designing a replacement culvert for an old 3-ft diameter culvert that collapsed. If we replace it with another 3-ft diameter pipe, the headwater will not overtop the road (not even close), but if we use the criteria that HW/D cannot exceed 1.5, then a 4-ft diameter pipe is needed. I've seen this design criteria in several publications, but haven't found any reasoning or justification for it. If anyone knows, I would appreciate an answer.