Size a line and sanity-check velocity
Start from flow rate and pipe size, then validate velocity and Reynolds number before committing to a pressure-drop method.
Pipe flow, pressure loss, pumps, valves, open-channel flow, and practical process calculations.
Browser-first calculations for internal flow, pump studies, valve sizing helpers, and lightweight process engineering checks.
Curated decision paths for this family. Calculator implementations are deferred; these blocks anchor how the catalog will be used once tools ship.
Start from flow rate and pipe size, then validate velocity and Reynolds number before committing to a pressure-drop method.
Pick a friction model that matches your data fidelity (Darcy-Weisbach vs Hazen-Williams), then add major losses where fittings matter.
Relate total dynamic head, affinity laws, and NPSH margins so the hydraulic story stays consistent across operating points.
Translate between Cv/Kv, orifice behavior, and line losses when throttling or metering is part of the process.
Priority tools for this subcategory. Cross-links point to the main Engineering hub until dedicated calculator routes exist.
Pressure Drop Calculator content entry for Fluids Process workflows.
On hub: Pressure Drop Calculator
Pipe Velocity Calculator content entry for Fluids Process workflows.
On hub: Pipe Velocity Calculator
Reynolds Number Calculator content entry for Fluids Process workflows.
On hub: Reynolds Number Calculator
Pump Affinity Laws Calculator content entry for Fluids Process workflows.
On hub: Pump Affinity Laws Calculator
Full catalog slice for this family (30 tools), ordered by launch wave then name.
Supporting guides are mapped in the content model. Published guide slugs open in /guides; unpublished slugs still jump to Engineering hub anchors for context.
How To Calculate Pressure Drop In Pipes guide entry for Fluids Process content.
Primary tool: Pressure Drop Calculator
On hub: Open published guide
What Reynolds Number Means in Pipe Flow guide entry for Fluids Process content.
Primary tool: Reynolds Number Calculator
On hub: Open published guide
How Pump Affinity Laws Change Flow Head And Power guide entry for Fluids Process content.
Primary tool: Pump Affinity Laws Calculator
On hub: Open published guide
When should I prefer Darcy-Weisbach over Hazen-Williams?
Darcy-Weisbach is the more general framework when fluid properties and friction factor detail matter. Hazen-Williams can be acceptable for quick water-work estimates when you accept its empirical limits.
Why do pump laws show up next to pipe loss tools?
Most real workflows iterate between the system curve (losses) and the pump curve (head and power). Keeping those checks adjacent reduces inconsistent assumptions across operating cases.
Are these tools a substitute for code compliance or stamped engineering?
No. They are structured quick checks and teaching-oriented workflows. Final design responsibility, standards selection, and documentation remain with the engineer of record.