Potcarb
Chemical
- Oct 22, 2020
- 9
Hi,
I'm sizing a natural gas line that feeds a combustion blower. There is an Eclipse Engineering Guide that I found online that shows some tables for pressure drop in the line at varying flows. It also states:
Air, gas and mixture piping systems should be sized to deliver flow at a uniform pressure distribution and without excessive pressure losses in transit. Two factors cause air pressure loss and consequent pressure variations:
1) Friction in piping and bends, and
2) Velocity pressure losses due to changes in direction
In combustion work, piping runs are usually short (under 50 ft.), but often have many bends. By assuming that all velocity pressure is lost or dissipated at each change of direction and by using a pipe size to give a very low velocity pressure, other losses can be disregarded. In general, a velocity pressure of 0.3 to 0.5″ w.c. satisfies this need.
This sort of makes sense to me. I guess the goal is just to keep uniform flow and pressure? I'd like to understand this better so I can size pipes in the cases where I may need to go above 0.5" inWC.
Thanks
I'm sizing a natural gas line that feeds a combustion blower. There is an Eclipse Engineering Guide that I found online that shows some tables for pressure drop in the line at varying flows. It also states:
Air, gas and mixture piping systems should be sized to deliver flow at a uniform pressure distribution and without excessive pressure losses in transit. Two factors cause air pressure loss and consequent pressure variations:
1) Friction in piping and bends, and
2) Velocity pressure losses due to changes in direction
In combustion work, piping runs are usually short (under 50 ft.), but often have many bends. By assuming that all velocity pressure is lost or dissipated at each change of direction and by using a pipe size to give a very low velocity pressure, other losses can be disregarded. In general, a velocity pressure of 0.3 to 0.5″ w.c. satisfies this need.
This sort of makes sense to me. I guess the goal is just to keep uniform flow and pressure? I'd like to understand this better so I can size pipes in the cases where I may need to go above 0.5" inWC.
Thanks