Pipe Flow Calculator

Calculate pipe flow rate in GPM and CFM, flow velocity, Reynolds number, and pressure drop using Darcy-Weisbach for water, oil, air, and gas.

in
ft/s
Flow Rate (GPM)
Flow Rate (CFM)
Reynolds Number
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
in
ft/s
Flow Rate (GPM)
Flow Rate (CFM)
Pipe Area
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail
GPM
in
ft
%

Flow Conditions

Flow Velocity
Reynolds Number
Flow Regime

Pressure & Head Loss

Moody Friction Factor
Head Loss
Pressure Drop

Pump Sizing

Pump Power Required

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter pipe diameter in inches and flow velocity in ft/s.
  2. Results show flow rate in GPM and CFM, plus Reynolds number.
  3. Use the Professional tier for pressure drop and friction factor calculations.

Formula

Area = π × (D/2)²

Flow (ft³/s) = Velocity × Area

GPM = Flow × 448.83 | CFM = Flow × 60

Re = V × D / ν (kinematic viscosity)

Example

Example: 2-inch pipe at 3 ft/s → Area = 0.0218 ft² → Flow = 0.0654 ft³/s → 29.4 GPM.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Flow rate = velocity × cross-sectional area. Q (ft³/s) = V (ft/s) × π × (D/2)². Convert to GPM by multiplying ft³/s × 448.83.
  • Reynolds number = (velocity × diameter) / kinematic viscosity. Re < 2300 is laminar flow, Re > 4000 is turbulent flow.
  • Use the Darcy-Weisbach equation: ΔP = f × (L/D) × (ρV²/2). This calculator computes it automatically with the Moody friction factor.
  • Water in residential pipes: 2–5 ft/s for supply lines, up to 8 ft/s for short runs. Above 8 ft/s causes erosion and noise.
  • Pipe roughness (ε) affects friction factor. PVC/smooth: 0.000005 ft; copper: 0.000005 ft; steel: 0.00015 ft; cast iron: 0.00085 ft.

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