I don't know what class 5K, 10K etc is - I've never seen pipe design defined this way before. 5,000 what?
Anyway, ropumar, you are not correct. What you need to look at is how each element in the system works and what are your fixed points.
The fixed items are atmospheric pressure and our boiler pressure and steam flow. As the pressure exceeds your limit, PSVs can operate in a variety of ways, either "pop off" where they open fully or variable where they gradually open fully over a set pressure range. either way, at full flow, they are sized to allow only a set amount of flow through their orifice / opening otherwise the piping and other systems downstream would need to be huge. These orifices create a significant pressure drop
In terms of your piping, you start at the far end at atmospheric then add the back pressure. This could be considerable I the case of steam as it will expand from one end to the other relating in higher and higher velocities, however there are simulations and programs to calculate this. I agree with don, 100m of 6" pipe sounds like a long way in a small pipe and seems really quite odd.
There are valves which can ignore the downstream back pressure, but you do need to specify what this is to your PSV vendor so he can calculate the orifice size to be able to relieve your max flow.
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