DonU
Mechanical
- Aug 28, 1999
- 2
I’ve always worked Bernoulli’s equation from point 1 to point 2 using a known source of water usually a pond (point 1) running through a pump to the discharge typically a nozzle (point 2). How would one use Bernoulli’s equation from say a fire hydrant to predict the flow from a nozzle downstream before spending all of the money for plumbing?
Would point 1 be merely the pressure head as read from a gauge on the hydrant (before turning it on) with the velocity head of zero, potential head of zero and of course head added from outside sources as zero? And then could I solve for velocity and head losses at point 2 (outside of nozzle) by considering the pressure to be zero and the potential head of my elevation change.
I would think that the pressure at point 1 would represent the total amount of energy available at this point, regardless of what’s happening upstream with the city’s plumbing. I would also expect that when I do plumb from the hydrant that I would see a slight decrease in pressure from the gauge where the energy is being converted to velocity head, head loss, and potential head.
Am I screwed up? If so, can someone please help? This problem seams to come up for me quite often.
Would point 1 be merely the pressure head as read from a gauge on the hydrant (before turning it on) with the velocity head of zero, potential head of zero and of course head added from outside sources as zero? And then could I solve for velocity and head losses at point 2 (outside of nozzle) by considering the pressure to be zero and the potential head of my elevation change.
I would think that the pressure at point 1 would represent the total amount of energy available at this point, regardless of what’s happening upstream with the city’s plumbing. I would also expect that when I do plumb from the hydrant that I would see a slight decrease in pressure from the gauge where the energy is being converted to velocity head, head loss, and potential head.
Am I screwed up? If so, can someone please help? This problem seams to come up for me quite often.