nomorenames
Mechanical
- Feb 4, 2014
- 7
There's a rule of thumb that says a flow meter requires ten diameters of straight pipe upstream, and five diameters of straight pipe downstream in order to provide "clean" flow at the meters inlet/outlet. This rule is often printed explicitly in the installation manuals for commercially produced flow meters.
Question: will these lengths of straight pipe permit me to do whatever I want to the flow at positions further upstream/downstream of those limits? Or are these lengths only intended to cope with the typical minor flow perturbations introduced by simple elbows and/or manifolds?
Question: will these lengths of straight pipe permit me to do whatever I want to the flow at positions further upstream/downstream of those limits? Or are these lengths only intended to cope with the typical minor flow perturbations introduced by simple elbows and/or manifolds?