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Replies
Steve Wiencek said:
how does the comparisson stack up on the basis you use less fittings with flex than you do with rigid?
100ft say with two short radius bends at best or two 90 deg fittings vs no fittings on the flex?
Richard-
The coefficient of friction is a misleading value. As in the case of the photo above showing new flex versus 15 year old flex. The coefficient of friction is an empirical measurement – it has to be measured experimentally, and cannot be found through calculations. While your values may differ somewhat from my values, the overall point is that they are both based on new pipe and, in theory, should remain a near constant value throughout the life of the pipe. But how can they when one compares the interior roughness of the two pipes above? How does one even begin to quantify the cof of flex pipe when it is variable (read gets worse) over time?
Steve, where did you get this info? I had a hard time finding data on flex PVC until I found the roughness here, but with the much greater absolute roughness of flex PVC (0.2 mm vs. 0.005 mm) I show 2" @ 40 GPM ft/100ft as going from 2.56 to 3.88. The 2.56 I show vs. 2.663 you show for rigid PVC are essentially the same since there is a range of roughness assumptions as well as temperature, but the flex number you show would imply a flex PVC pipe that was nearly as smooth as rigid PVC.
WAIT! I called FlexPVC and they said just to add 5% to standard PVC losses since it is very close to rigid PVC. He said the roughness was not 0.2 mm but far less in the hundreths of a millimeter.
There's a summary of issues with flexible PVC including the significantly lower working/burst PSI levels and temperature derating (the latter is the same as regular PVC). There is also a FAQ.
The absolute roughness for rigid PVC is from 0.0015 to 0.007 mm with an average of 0.004 mm which is 0.0001" so is significantly smoother than flexible PVC, but flex PVC is not rough everywhere -- it only has spaced ridges that come up around 0.01" to 0.02". This link gives effective inner roughness of rigid PVC as 0.005 mm while flexible PVC is 0.2 mm so I was wrong in my initial post to assume they were similar. I have a spreadsheet where you can enter the pipe size as well as the absolute roughness to get tables of head loss. I do this below comparing rigid PVC (using 0.005 mm) vs. flexible PVC (using 0.2 mm).
1.5" Pipe head loss (ft per 100 ft) .......... 2" Pipe head loss
GPM .... Rigid PVC .... Flex PVC ........ Rigid PVC .... Flex PVC
10 ............ 0.71 .............. 0.97 ................ 0.22 ............. 0.27
20 ............ 2.45 .............. 3.68 ................ 0.74 ............. 1.01
30 ............ 5.09 .............. 8.13 ................ 1.53 ............. 2.21
40 ............ 8.57 ............ 14.31 ................ 2.56 ............. 3.88
50 .......... 12.87 ............ 22.22 ................ 3.83 ............. 6.01
60 .......... 17.97 ............ 31.87 ................ 5.33 ............. 8.60
70 .......... 23.85 ........... 43.25 ............... 7.06 ........... 11.65
80 .......... 30.51 ............ 56.37 ................ 9.01 ........... 15.16
90 .......... 37.93 ........... 71.22 ............. 11.18 ........... 19.13
100 ........ 46.11 ........... 87.80 ............. 13.57 ........... 23.57
"...is there any significant difference in calculating friction head loss?"
The friction loss of 100' of 2" sch 40 pvc @ 40 gpm = 2.663 ft of head.
The friction loss of 100' of 2" flex pvc @ 40 gpm = 2.75 ft of head.
This is obviously for new pipe
John Warner said:
That is an issue. We don't have any insect damage like that in Ohio, so it is not an issue up here. Definitely if that is an issue than it should never be used where you have termites.
(although i would trade warmer weather and termites for cold and snow)
If we could only just educate the termites not to eat it. Herein lies the problem.
Matt Cellura said: