Your question is not exactly complete. I think what you are asking is, what is the pressure differential? he pressure differential is caused by friction when a fluid in a pipe is flowing. The faster the fluid flows the greater the pressure differential. Other factors that affect the pressure differential are the relative roughness of the pipe, the pipe diameter, the viscosity and density of the fluid.
I hope this helps.
2007-01-27 13:02:38
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answer #1
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answered by Scott S 4
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Personally, I've never heard of flow pressure. Here's what I've been able to find on the Net.
Flow in pipes, open channels, hydrology, groundwater. Liquid, gas, water, air. Venturi, nozzle, orifice flowmeters. Weirs, flumes. Pipe networks, water hammer. Bernoulli, Manning, Moody. Culvert design, inverted siphon. Pressure, flow, discharge, sizing. Tank volume, pipe volume, unit conversions.
If you need to perform calculations, go to www.lmnoeng.com/
You might also want to check out:
http://www.flowresearch.com/
Flow Research conducts market studies about instrumentation in a wide variety of areas. We create these studies through interviews with suppliers, distributors, and end-users. We have available a market study on every type of flowmeter. We have published multiple editions of our Coriolis, ultrasonic, magnetic, and vortex flowmeter studies. We have recently published new studies on temperature sensors and transmitters
2007-01-27 08:22:34
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answer #2
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answered by D N 6
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Pressurized flow is one of the hardest subjects in undergraduate engineering. You better study harder, or get some one on one tutoring.
2007-01-28 09:14:01
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answer #3
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answered by daedgewood 4
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