[AT] Pressure drop?
rlgoss at insightbb.com
rlgoss at insightbb.com
Tue Jan 29 19:15:42 PST 2008
It's going to depend on the flow rate, Farmer. If it's just a pressurized line, there is no pressure drop. But if you want it to deliver 9 CFM at 90 PSI, you may have trouble. I don't have the formula with me for doing the calculation, but it shouldn't be difficult to find. Try searching for "line loss."
Larry
----- Original Message -----
From: Francis Robinson <robinson at svs.net>
Date: Tuesday, January 29, 2008 20:57
Subject: [AT] Pressure drop?
To: Antique tractor email discussion group <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
> OK, who knows compressed air pressure drop off of the top of
> your head?
> :-)
> I am going to run a compressed air line from one shop to the
> other. It
> will run inside of an underground conduit in 1/2" PEX tubing. It
> will
> basically have one fitting (full 1/2") at each end of the run.
> The run will
> be 250' long with no fittings at all in the line itself. If I
> have 125 PSI
> at one end what kind of drop can I expect at the other end? What
> would it
> be at 800'?
> BTW, PEX is rated and recommended for compressed air. I was
> reading the
> print on the pipe today and for water what I have on hand at the
> moment is
> rated at 100 PSI at 180 degrees F. It will not get hard and
> brittle and it
> will not shatter on impact. It is cross linked polyethylene and
> is not
> affected by oil.
> I am really in love with this stuff for water plumbing.
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> "farmer"
>
>
> Francis Robinson
> Central Indiana, USA
> Robinson at svs.net
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