Estimate pipe diameter based on flow rate

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on estimating the smallest diameter of a complex pipe design based on flow rate measurements to identify potential construction faults. The user plans to force water through the pipe and measure flow rate, assuming that a smaller diameter will result in lower flow due to increased pressure buildup. However, it is clarified that flow measurements alone cannot accurately determine the smallest diameter or detect internal obstacles. Suggestions for measurement setups include physical tests, such as using a ball to check for blockages. The conversation emphasizes the need for a more comprehensive approach to assess pipe integrity beyond just flow rate analysis.
antonclaeys
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I'm designing a testing unit where I need to estimate the smallest diameter of a short complex pipe (around 1 meter, three bends and some diameter viariations). Since the pipe is being cooled down in a water bath after production, my idea is to force water with a known pressure in one end of the tube (other end is at pressure of the water bath) and measure the flow rate. I'm assuming that when the smalles diameter of the pipe is much smaller than normal due a construction fault, the flow rate will be lower due to higher pressure buildup in the smallest section of the pipe (like what happens if you almost close the end of your garden hose). However, I'm having troubles proving this. Are my assumptions correct and can someone get me started to prove this?
 
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antonclaeys said:
I'm assuming that when the smalles diameter of the pipe is much smaller than normal due a construction fault, the flow rate will be lower due to higher pressure buildup in the smallest section of the pipe
Pressure drop per length increases if pipe diameter goes down. There is a formula for constant pipe diameters (at least within some length) and laminar flow, but the basic idea stays the same independent of those conditions.

"Large diameter everywhere apart from a spot with small diameter" can still have a better flow than "medium diameter everywhere" - flow does not get a hard limit from some narrow section.
 
I don't understand: if you are manufacturing the pipe, don't you already know the geometry?
 
@mfb:
so you're saying that I probably won't be able to measure this?

@russ_watters:
I'm trying to build this system as a test to verify if the pipe diameter isn't smaller than normal; I'm trying to check for construction faults because sometimes the pipe can be almost fully closed and this won't get noticed early enough in the production process.
 
antonclaeys said:
@mfb:
so you're saying that I probably won't be able to measure this?
What is "this"?

antonclaeys said:
@russ_watters:
I'm trying to build this system as a test to verify if the pipe diameter isn't smaller than normal; I'm trying to check for construction faults because sometimes the pipe can be almost fully closed and this won't get noticed early enough in the production process.
You cannot measure the smallest diameter along the pipe just based on flow measurements.
 
mfb said:
You cannot measure the smallest diameter along the pipe just based on flow measurements.

Which variables do I need to measure to be able to tell if the pipe has internal obstacles due to production errors (and thus has a diameter which is smaller than normal)? Which kind of measurement setup do you propose?
 
Take a ball with the required minimal radius, try to get it through, see if it gets stuck?
 
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