Rich:
Your query, as stated, raises questions:
1) It is presumed you are pumping water from 5 identical pumps at a common flowrate of 60 gpm into a common, overhead, 6” header that is sloped or flowing by gravity into a main storage tank. The header’s contents are “dumped” into the main storage tank through its roof via free-fall. The header does not feed the main tank through the bottom of the liquid contents in the tank. Each pump is located at a different location and each pump is assumed to operate simultaneously, yielding a total of 300 gpm total flow into the overhead, 6” header. Is this description correct? If not, please correct my assumptions.
2) It is assumed the main storage tank is open to atmospheric pressure. Is this correct?
3) If the main storage tank is at atmospheric pressure, why the employment of Schedule 80 PVC pipe? Is it due to piping support spans? Is it due to expected water pressure requirements? Heavier pipe schedules reduce the pipe carrying capacity.
4) All 5 pumps do not have to “fight” each other to get their discharge into the 6” header, if piped correctly. Why makes you think they would? I have assumed the 5 discharges into the 6” header are located at different locations along the header – at least as apart as the 5 source tanks are. Is this correct?
5) What do you mean by the “last leg coming into the header”? Is this the 2” discharge into the 6” header that is located the closest to the main storage tank? I expect this point to have the least pressure drop in the system.
If my assumptions are basically correct, then what you have to do is to calculate the pressure profile of the 6” header as the incremental flows are commingled in it and progressively approach the main storage tank. Basically, pipe sizes increase in proportion to their capacity – as viewed from a velocity point of view. In other words, I know 2” pipe will easily transport 60 gpm through a 25 psi drop; therefore, since 2” pipe has a cross-section area of 0.0205 ft2, and 6” has 0.180 ft2, it figures that the 6” header has a chance to handle the total flow of 5*60 = 300 gpm since 5*0.0205 = 0.1025 ft2 – which is less than the 6” flow area.
You should make the necessary pressure drop calculations, using the relative distances and heights of each of the 5 pumps’ discharge into the main header. You start the calculations at the main storage tank and work backwards, obtaining each of the 5 individual discharge pressure required by each of the pumps. Since you are using PVC, your friction factor should be very low and if you use a minimum of fittings and only use long radius elbows, you should get a reasonably low pressure drop in the piping – depending on the trajectory length of each pump discharge and the main header. The hydraulic calculations done with the Darcy-Weisbach equation should be pretty straight-forward and yield a reasonably accurate pressure profile of the system.
I hope this helps.