Although I cannot be certain, I do believe the Sverdrup study was in fact done on a sanitary sewer basin (I think it was in Nashville - ealry to mid '90's).
However, as was eluded to in earlier posts, the jointing does in fact cause significant reduction in the "true" Manning's "n" when looking at it from a MH to MH basis.
During my days as a basin drainage modeler (we were using 386's and 486's in those days), most of the models that we set-up and calibrated found that both storm and sanitary were virtually identical in the Manning's "n" values, and 0.014 to 0.016 for older PVC pipe were fairly typical.
Hope this helps.
MB