36-inch CMP Road Crossing — HDS-5 Inlet vs Outlet Control Worked Example
A county gravel-road culvert replacement over an intermittent stream. The 25-year peak discharge is 42 cfs from an upstream NRCS/TR-55 basin; the county limits headwater to HW/D ≤ 1.25 so the road grade is not overtopped at the design event. FHWA HDS-5 requires computing both inlet control (entrance geometry limits flow) and outlet control (barrel friction + tailwater limits flow) and taking whichever produces the higher headwater. Sources: FHWA Hydraulic Design of Highway Culverts (HDS-5, FHWA-HIF-12-026), NRCS TR-55 for the design hydrograph basis, and HEC-14 for outlet protection.
The crossing
A 36-inch corrugated metal pipe (CMP, 2⅔ × ½ in corrugations) replaces a failing 30-inch pipe on a county gravel road. The intermittent channel downstream is shallow at low flow; survey gives tailwater depth TW = 0.5 ft above the outlet invert at Q25. The inlet projects from the fill face with no headwall. Design parameters:
| Design discharge | Q25 = 42 cfs (NRCS/TR-55 basin, 25-yr storm) |
| Pipe | 36-inch CMP, inside diameter D = 3.0 ft |
| Barrel length L | 120 ft (roadway + side slopes) |
| Barrel slope S0 | 2.5% = 0.025 ft/ft |
| Manning's n | 0.024 (CMP 2⅔ × ½ in; HDS-5 Table 4-2) |
| Inlet | CMP projecting (no headwall); Ke = 0.5 per county standard detail* |
| Tailwater TW | 0.5 ft above outlet invert at design Q |
| Headwater limit | HW/D ≤ 1.25 (county gravel-road standard) |
*County detail uses Ke = 0.5 for a beveled/projecting ring; HDS-5 Table 4-1 lists Ke = 0.9 for plain projecting CMP. We use 0.5 per the permit drawing and note the HDS-5 value in Step 6.
Assume full flow at the 25-year design discharge
At Q25 = 42 cfs on a 2.5% slope, the barrel runs full under both inlet- and outlet-control analyses (typical for design-flood sizing). Compute area, hydraulic radius, and velocity for the outlet-control energy equation.
A = πr² = π(1.5)² = 7.07 ft²
R = D/4 = 0.75 ft (full circular pipe)
V = Q/A = 42/7.07 = 5.94 ft/s
Verify full-flow capacity on the same slope with Manning's equation (n = 0.024, S = 2.5%): Qfull ≈ 52 cfs > 42 cfs — full flow is consistent.
Type 1 polynomial — Chart 3, CMP projecting
HDS-5 Appendix A gives the submerged inlet-control equation (Form 2), accurate when Q/(A·D0.5) > 4. For CMP projecting from Table 4-1: c = 0.0553, Y = 0.54.
HWi/D = c · [Q/(A · D0.5)]2 + Y − 0.5 · S0
Flow intensity term:
Q/(A · D0.5) = 42 / (7.07 · 3.00.5)
= 42 / (7.07 · 1.732) = 42 / 12.24 = 3.43 (< 4 — near unsubmerged transition; acceptable for preliminary sizing)
Headwater ratio:
HWi/D = 0.0553 · (3.43)2 + 0.54 − 0.5(0.025)
= 0.0553 · 11.76 + 0.54 − 0.0125
= 0.650 + 0.540 − 0.013 = 1.18
Inlet-control headwater:
HWi = 1.18 · 3.0 = 3.53 ft above inlet invert
Run the same numbers in the culvert hydraulics tool (CMP projecting, 36 in, L = 120 ft, S = 2.5%, n = 0.024, Q = 42 cfs, TW = 0.5 ft).
Full-barrel flow with entrance loss and friction
Outlet-control headwater accounts for tailwater, velocity head, entrance loss (Ke·V²/2g), barrel friction, and the slope drop along length L:
Friction grouping (HDS-5 outlet-control form):
29.16 · n² · L / R4/3 = 29.16 · (0.024)² · 120 / (0.75)4/3
= 29.16 · 0.000576 · 120 / 0.826 = 2.96
Loss coefficient sum: 1 + Ke + 2.96 = 1 + 0.5 + 2.96 = 4.46
Velocity-head term:
H = 4.46 · (5.94)² / (2 · 32.2) = 4.46 · 35.3 / 64.4 = 2.44 ft
Outlet-control headwater (use max(TW, D) when TW is below crown per HDS-5 energy balance):
HWo = max(0.5, 3.0) + 2.44 − 120(0.025)
= 3.0 + 2.44 − 3.0 = 2.44 ft above inlet invert
The slope drop L·S0 = 3.0 ft exactly offsets the barrel-depth term when TW is low, so outlet-control HW collapses to the combined head-loss term alone. This is common on steep, short culverts with shallow tailwater.
Take the higher headwater
| Control type | HW (ft) | HW/D | Governs? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inlet control | 3.53 | 1.18 | Yes |
| Outlet control | 2.44 | 0.81 | — |
| Design HW | 3.53 | 1.18 | Limit 1.25 ✓ |
Freeboard below road subgrade: 1.25 · 3.0 − 3.53 = 3.75 − 3.53 = 0.22 ft under the HW/D cap
Crown clearance at design HW: 3.0 − 3.53 = −0.53 ft — inlet is submerged; expected at HW/D > 1.0
Scour protection downstream
At full-barrel design flow, the outlet velocity is the mean section velocity. County standards typically require energy dissipation above ~6 ft/s on erodible channels; HEC-14 provides riprap sizing.
Riprap D50 (HEC-14 simplified, horizontal apron):
D50 ≈ 0.044 · V² = 0.044 · (5.94)² = 0.044 · 35.3 = 1.55 in
Specify: 2-in minimum Class B riprap (or 4-in if channel is highly erodible), Lapron ≈ 4D = 4 · 3.0 = 12 ft, geotextile underlay per county standard.
Check downstream channel capacity at bank-full with Manning's equation on the receiving stream (intermittent channel n ≈ 0.035–0.045). If the channel cannot pass 42 cfs without overtopping private property, the tailwater assumption TW = 0.5 ft is wrong and outlet control may govern after all.
Material roughness and entrance geometry
| Alternative | Inlet HW (ft) | Outlet HW (ft) | HW/D |
|---|---|---|---|
| 36-in CMP projecting (n=0.024) — this design | 3.53 | 2.44 | 1.18 |
| 36-in CMP + headwall (c=0.0379, Y=0.69, Ke=0.5) | 3.37 | 2.44 | 1.12 |
| 36-in RCP square edge (n=0.012, c=0.0398, Y=0.67) | 3.38 | 1.23 | 1.13 |
Beyond preliminary HDS-5 sizing
- No TR-55 hydrograph routing on this page. We took Q25 = 42 cfs as given. The basin hydrograph (NRCS TR-55 tabular method or WinTR-20) establishes that peak and its duration; a short-duration peak on a steep culvert can produce a higher head than steady-state analysis suggests.
- No HY-8 performance curve. FHWA HY-8 plots HW vs. Q across inlet- and outlet-control transitions, unsubmerged inlet conditions at low flow, and road overtopping. Required for state DOT lettings; recommended for any HW/D within 5% of the allowable cap.
- No 50- or 100-year check storm. County roads often allow overtopping at the check event but require the structure survive. A Q100 ≈ 1.5× Q25 here (~63 cfs) would push HW/D well above 1.25 — document allowable overtopping or upsize.
- No fish passage / aquatic organism passage. Intermittent or not, some jurisdictions now require velocity and depth limits at low flow; that drives a different design basis than Q25 alone.
For a full watershed-to-submittal workflow with routed hydrographs and multi-culvert networks, see HydroComplete.
Tools used in this example
Reproduce every step in the live PE-Calc tools: culvert hydraulics (HDS-5 inlet + outlet control). Entrance loss Ke values are in the culvert entrance loss reference. Full-flow Manning verification and downstream channel checks use Manning's equation. The design discharge basis (TR-55 basin) can be built with NRCS curve number and Rational Method for smaller tributary areas.
Buying the lot? Check the drainage before you buy.
Road crossings, floodplain limits, and downstream property rights determine whether a 36-inch CMP is permitted at all. A county gravel-road standard does not mean the site is outside a FEMA flood zone or wetland buffer. SitePrior screens FEMA, NWI, NRCS soils, and USGS context for $29 in about 60 seconds. Run it before the offer, not after the survey.