2ndIntegral
Mechanical
- Mar 26, 2010
- 7
Hi All,
Could anyone lend some historic perspective as to why non-preferred (uncommon) pipe sizes are just that? The enduring tradition is that, for example, 1 ¼” (32), 2 ½” (65), 3 ½” (90), 5” (125) are indeed manufactured but are non-preferred and thus relegated to the “use only if you have to” decision pile.
The reason for asking is that line sizing and hydraulic analysis is slightly inconvenienced by the larger jumps in flow area. Skipping the “half” sizes on larger bores is less significant as the marginal increase in flow area naturally decreases with incremental increases in diameter. Quite the opposite for a jump from 4” to 6” whilst missing an intermediate 5”.
Are these pipe sizes uncommon due to tooling and jigging or simply rationalising of pipe options?
Regards
Could anyone lend some historic perspective as to why non-preferred (uncommon) pipe sizes are just that? The enduring tradition is that, for example, 1 ¼” (32), 2 ½” (65), 3 ½” (90), 5” (125) are indeed manufactured but are non-preferred and thus relegated to the “use only if you have to” decision pile.
The reason for asking is that line sizing and hydraulic analysis is slightly inconvenienced by the larger jumps in flow area. Skipping the “half” sizes on larger bores is less significant as the marginal increase in flow area naturally decreases with incremental increases in diameter. Quite the opposite for a jump from 4” to 6” whilst missing an intermediate 5”.
Are these pipe sizes uncommon due to tooling and jigging or simply rationalising of pipe options?
Regards