Hydraulics for Engineers And Engineering Students

Cover Hydraulics for Engineers And Engineering Students
Hydraulics for Engineers And Engineering Students
F C Frederick Charles Lea
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Yv n Professor Unwin* in 1886, by an examination of experiments on cast-iron pipes, deduced the formula, for smooth cast-iron pipes, _ -, , . . '0007?; 2 and for rough pipes, i -, ri .
M. Flamantt in 1892 examined carefully the experiments available on flow in pipes and proposed the formula, yy 175 for all classes of pipes, and suggested for y the following values : Lead pipes \ Glass \ '000236 to '00028, Wrought-iron (smooth) J Cast-iron new "000336, in service '000417.
If the student plots fr
...om Table XVI, log d as ordinates, and log k as abscissae, it will be found, that the points all lie between two straight lines the equations to which are log k = log '00069 - 1'25 log d, and log k = log '00028 - 1'25 log d.
Further, the points for any class of pipes not only lie between these two lines, but also lie about some line nearly parallel to these lines. So that p is not very different from 1'25. From the table, n is seen to vary from 1*70 to 2'08. A general formula is thus obtained, , -00028 to '00069^' torflg I d 1 * The variations in y, n, and p are, however, too great to admit of the formula being useful for practical purposes.


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