UtilityLouie
Mechanical
- May 3, 2001
- 102
Hello,
I have been forced to calculate some ductwork pressure drop by hand and ran into some inconsistancies. For a given rectangular duct size on a Ductulator, the velocity doesn't match up with what you would typically calculate as an average duct velocity. ASHRAE Fundamentals even states that the average velocity in a duct is Flow over Area, but the Ductulator doesn't seem to support this.
For example:
64" x 60" duct, 100,000 CFM
The Ductulator shows a velocity over 4000 FPM. Hand calculation shows an average velocity of 3750 FPM. This velocity affects your Reynolds number, and from there the friction factor and from there the pressure drop. This velocity also affects your calculated velocity pressure.
Can anyone out there straighten this out for me?
Thanks.
I have been forced to calculate some ductwork pressure drop by hand and ran into some inconsistancies. For a given rectangular duct size on a Ductulator, the velocity doesn't match up with what you would typically calculate as an average duct velocity. ASHRAE Fundamentals even states that the average velocity in a duct is Flow over Area, but the Ductulator doesn't seem to support this.
For example:
64" x 60" duct, 100,000 CFM
The Ductulator shows a velocity over 4000 FPM. Hand calculation shows an average velocity of 3750 FPM. This velocity affects your Reynolds number, and from there the friction factor and from there the pressure drop. This velocity also affects your calculated velocity pressure.
Can anyone out there straighten this out for me?
Thanks.