@-thirtyfive - you may think I am being pedantic, but I feel that it is important to distinguish between the calculation of a friction factor and the calculation of a flow rate or pressure drop. The Churchill equation is not a flow equation. It is a correlation for estimating the friction factor. The friction factor can then be used in the Darcy-Weisbach flow equation for incompressible fluids, the isothermal or adiabatic flow equations for compressible fluids, and a whole host of flow equations for two-phase gas-liquid flow.
It is very important not to be deceived into thinking that because the Churchill equation gives unique values for the friction factor in the critical zone between the laminar and turbulent zones that they are real usable numbers. The fact that the equation gives unique results is important in computer solutions - I have taken advantage of this myself in my AioFlo software - but as engineers we must be aware of the dangers of designing in the critical zone.
Here are some quotes regarding the friction factor in the critical zone:
From Churchill's 1977 paper - "The various sets of experimental data for the transition regime between laminar and turbulent flow are quite scattered."
From Coulson and Richardson Vol 1 - "Reproducible values of pressure drop cannot be obtained in this region."
From Rennels and Hudson - "For pipe Reynolds numbers between 2100 and 3000 to 4000, the friction factor can have large uncertainties and is highly indeterminate."
Fortunately in gas flow it is very unlikely that laminar or critical flow will be encountered.
It is a pity that the friction factor charts in the old Moody and Colebrook-White papers are no longer used. There is too much time pressure on engineers these days to get results out quickly and we don't have time to plot points on the charts anymore, but there is a great deal of understanding to be obtained by knowing where on the chart (and how close to the transition points) we are working. I suppose this is the price of progress.
Some clarification on the 10% rule that was mentioned by several posters above. This refers to the practice of using the Darcy-Weisbach equation, which strictly speaking is for incompressible flow only, for gas flow provided the pressure drop is less than 10% of the absolute upstream pressure. In my experience using this rule of thumb does give reasonable results, but with computerized methods available to do it properly there is not much point in doing this. It was helpful in the days of slide rules, and even with 4-function calculators, but it can also be relegated to the scrap heap now.
Katmar Software - AioFlo Pipe Hydraulics
"An undefined problem has an infinite number of solutions"