Zaid24
If the system has telemetry, that data is most prized, flow rates at sources and recordings of pressure in the system and levels in reservoirs will aid in predicting the flow and pressure in calibrating the model.
lacking such data, get yourself a pressure chart recorder, about $500 and place it in locations of choice for a week, at sources, at ends, at reservoirs.
To get flows, read the meters at the sources (aka master meters) on very frequent basis, during peak flow in summer once per hour is nice if you have the time else daily will also help
A tool that can also help is a strap on flow recorder, it wraps around the meter head and reads the spinning of the transfer magnets and records the flowrates. (about 2k)
Another method includes, once you have baseline data above, perform fire flow tests, measuring static pressure, residual pressure and flow. Your model should predict the responses to the flow test, be sure you know the base flow demands, source feed rates and tank levels during the tests.
Be sure you know how those 7 pressure zones react to each other, else unknown connections that only operate intermittently can skew your results.
Hydrae