USAeng
Mechanical
- Jun 6, 2010
- 419
At our plant we have a 4" gas line coming to some recently placed equipment. We are trying to understand if the existing 4" pipe with our 8.5psi supply pressure will allow enough gas for the new equipment.
Critical piece of equipment needs 5psi minimum and gas flow of 13,000SCFM. It is 75' from the supply pipe to the equipment with a 3" pipe. There are 2 other pieces of equipment also - 1 requires 12"WC at 10,000SCFM with 2" pipe and the other at 12" WC at 8,000 SCFM with 2" pipe- both of these have approx. 100' piping to the equipment.
Some people here are saying this engineering toolbox chart says we will not have enough gas. I do not understand what this chart is supposed to explain. Can someone explain what it should be used for? There is a small section of pipe that goes over a bridge from the meter to our plant (about 100' that is 3"). So those people are using the 3" section as the pipe size and saying you can only get 23,400-33,860SCFM through the 3" pipe. I do not think they are using the chart correctly.
We have tried this from Google
using pages A-7 and A-9 I find expected flow to be 45,000SCFM using P1 as 8.5psi and P2 as 5psi, 75' pipe length and 3" pipe
We have also tried using this Renouard equation which gives about 50,000SCFM
Are these acceptable ways or estimating our gas usage? Also something we don't understand is while we get the high numbers for flow using the chart and equation for the 75' of pipe - if I take the same equation or chart and put in the numbers that exist at our gas Meter (10psi) with 1.8psi drop to the point on our property which is about 1700' away - numbers for flow equal close to 16,000 SCFM
Can anyone help explain how guys normally would do this? It feels like we going about this wrong. Sorry for the long post
Critical piece of equipment needs 5psi minimum and gas flow of 13,000SCFM. It is 75' from the supply pipe to the equipment with a 3" pipe. There are 2 other pieces of equipment also - 1 requires 12"WC at 10,000SCFM with 2" pipe and the other at 12" WC at 8,000 SCFM with 2" pipe- both of these have approx. 100' piping to the equipment.
Some people here are saying this engineering toolbox chart says we will not have enough gas. I do not understand what this chart is supposed to explain. Can someone explain what it should be used for? There is a small section of pipe that goes over a bridge from the meter to our plant (about 100' that is 3"). So those people are using the 3" section as the pipe size and saying you can only get 23,400-33,860SCFM through the 3" pipe. I do not think they are using the chart correctly.
We have tried this from Google
using pages A-7 and A-9 I find expected flow to be 45,000SCFM using P1 as 8.5psi and P2 as 5psi, 75' pipe length and 3" pipe
We have also tried using this Renouard equation which gives about 50,000SCFM
Are these acceptable ways or estimating our gas usage? Also something we don't understand is while we get the high numbers for flow using the chart and equation for the 75' of pipe - if I take the same equation or chart and put in the numbers that exist at our gas Meter (10psi) with 1.8psi drop to the point on our property which is about 1700' away - numbers for flow equal close to 16,000 SCFM
Can anyone help explain how guys normally would do this? It feels like we going about this wrong. Sorry for the long post