UPVC Pipe Sizing Guide & Calculator

Learn how to correctly size UPVC pipes for water supply systems. Includes formulas, reference tables, and a quick sizing calculator.

Updated February 202412 min readEngineering Guide

Correct pipe sizing is critical for efficient and economical water supply systems. An undersized pipe causes excessive pressure drop, noise, and wear, while an oversized pipe wastes material and increases costs. This guide provides the formulas, methods, and reference tables needed to size UPVC pipes correctly for any water supply application.

Quick Pipe Size Calculator

Enter your required flow rate to get a recommended pipe diameter based on design velocity of 1.5 m/s.

Key Pipe Sizing Concepts

Pipe sizing involves balancing three primary factors:

Flow Rate (Q)

The volume of water passing through the pipe per unit time. Measured in m³/hour or liters/second.

Velocity (v)

The speed of water flow through the pipe. Too high causes noise and wear; too low allows sediment buildup.

Pressure Drop (ΔP)

The loss of pressure as water flows through the pipe. Must stay within acceptable limits for system operation.

Pipe Sizing Formula

The fundamental relationship between flow rate, velocity, and pipe diameter is:

Q = v × A

Q = v × (π × d² / 4)

Where: Q = Flow rate (m³/s), v = Velocity (m/s), d = Internal diameter (m)

Rearranging to solve for diameter:

d = √(4Q / πv)

This gives the minimum internal diameter for the required flow at desired velocity.

Practical Formula (Common Units):

For flow rate in m³/hour and diameter in mm:

d(mm) = 18.8 × √(Q(m³/h) / v(m/s))

Recommended Velocity Guidelines

ApplicationMin VelocityRecommendedMax Velocity
Municipal Distribution0.6 m/s1.0-1.5 m/s2.0 m/s
Building Supply Main0.6 m/s1.5-2.0 m/s2.5 m/s
Branch Lines (Residential)0.5 m/s1.0-1.5 m/s2.4 m/s
Irrigation Systems0.5 m/s1.5-2.0 m/s3.0 m/s
Fire Protection-As per code3.0-4.5 m/s

Why Velocity Matters:

  • Below 0.5 m/s: Sediment settles, water quality degrades
  • 0.6-2.0 m/s: Optimal range for most applications
  • Above 2.5 m/s: Noise increases, pipe wear accelerates
  • Above 3.0 m/s: Risk of water hammer, joint stress

UPVC Pipe Sizing Reference Tables

Flow capacity based on design velocity of 1.6 m/s (typical for distribution systems).

Nominal Diameter (mm)Wall PN10 (mm)Wall PN16 (mm)Flow @ 1.6m/s (m³/h)
201.51.90.5
251.51.90.8
321.621.3
401.92.42
502.433.2
6333.85
753.64.57
904.35.410
1105.36.615
12567.419.5
1406.78.324.5
1607.79.532
2009.611.950
25011.914.878
3151518.7124
40019.123.7200

Pressure Drop Considerations

After selecting a diameter based on velocity, verify that pressure drop is acceptable. The Hazen-Williams formula is commonly used for water systems:

h = 10.67 × L × Q^1.852 / (C^1.852 × d^4.87)

Where: h = Head loss (m), L = Length (m), Q = Flow (m³/s), C = Roughness (150 for UPVC), d = Diameter (m)

Acceptable Pressure Drop:

  • Distribution mains: 1-3 m per 1000m of pipe
  • Building risers: 2-4 m per 1000m
  • Branch lines: Up to 5 m per 1000m

Pipe Sizing Examples

Example 1: Residential Building Main

Given:

  • • Peak demand: 8 m³/hour
  • • Design velocity: 1.5 m/s
  • • Pressure class: PN16

Solution:

d = 18.8 × √(8/1.5) = 43.4mm

Select: 50mm PN16 UPVC Pipe

Example 2: Irrigation Lateral

Given:

  • • Flow requirement: 25 m³/hour
  • • Design velocity: 2.0 m/s
  • • Pressure class: PN10

Solution:

d = 18.8 × √(25/2.0) = 66.4mm

Select: 75mm PN10 UPVC Pipe

Summary

Proper pipe sizing ensures efficient water delivery while minimizing costs. Key steps for sizing UPVC pipes:

  1. 1.Determine peak flow rate requirement
  2. 2.Select appropriate design velocity (typically 1.0-2.0 m/s)
  3. 3.Calculate minimum diameter using formula
  4. 4.Select next standard pipe size
  5. 5.Verify pressure drop is acceptable
CP

Crown Plastic Pipes Technical Team

Industry experts with 35+ years of experience in hydraulic engineering and plastic piping systems.