Pressure drop in a pipe is calculated using the Darcy-Weisbach equation: ΔP = f × (L/D) × (ρV²/2). The friction factor (f) depends on whether the flow is laminar or turbulent — determined by the Reynolds number: Re = ρVD/μ.
For laminar flow (Re < 2300), f = 64/Re. For turbulent flow (Re > 4000), the Moody chart or Colebrook-White equation is used. In practice, most industrial pipe flows are turbulent.
The minor losses (bends, valves, fittings) are often significant — sometimes exceeding the pipe friction loss in short systems. These are calculated using the equivalent length method or K-factor method.
Typical Flow Velocities
| Fluid | Recommended Velocity | Reason |
| Water (supply) | 0.5–2.0 m/s | Erosion, noise |
| Water (return) | 0.3–1.5 m/s | Sedimentation |
| Compressed Air | 6–10 m/s | Pressure drop |
| Hydraulic Oil | 2–4 m/s (pressure lines) | Heat, erosion |
Design rule: Keep pressure drop across the distribution system below 10% of the available supply pressure. Higher than that and your pumps are working harder than necessary — energy waste and increased operating cost.