Sf: Pressure Drop Online-calculator

Add fittings. Click "Elbow 90° LR" x 4, "Gate valve (full open)" x 1. The calculator sums the K-factors or uses the equivalent length method.

Enter flow rate (100 GPM).

Enter the temperature (45°F). The calculator auto-fills density (62.4 lb/ft³) and viscosity (1.3 cP – slightly higher than room temp). sf pressure drop online-calculator

Remember: The accuracy of the output depends entirely on the quality of the input. Always verify fluid properties, pipe inner diameters, and roughness values. Use the calculator as a design tool, not a black box. And for mission-critical systems (e.g., high-pressure steam or toxic chemicals), always perform a sanity check via manual approximation or a second calculation method.

In the complex world of industrial engineering, HVAC, and process piping, few calculations are as critical—yet as frequently miscalculated—as pressure drop. For professionals working with S tandard F luids (often denoted as "SF" in engineering shorthand), getting this number wrong can lead to pump cavitation, undersized pipes, or energy bills that spiral out of control. Add fittings

Input length (200 ft) and elevation change (if any). For horizontal runs, elevation is zero.

Select "Water" or "Standard Fluid" from the fluid library. Enter flow rate (100 GPM)

Choose pipe material – "Carbon Steel" – and select "2 in Schedule 40". The calculator automatically pulls the inner diameter (2.067 inches) and roughness (0.0018 ft or 0.045 mm).