Hazen-Williams Head Loss — 6-inch PVC Water Main Worked Example
A distribution lateral capacity and pressure-loss check on a new 6-inch C900 PVC water main serving a small commercial pad. The booster pump delivers 65 psi at the pump discharge; we need the residual pressure and velocity at the end of an 850-ft run at the design flow of 250 gpm. Hazen-Williams handles the distributed friction loss; the velocity-head method adds localized losses at fittings. Sources: AWWA M11 (steel pipe design, Hazen-Williams application and velocity guidance), AWWA M22 (PVC pipe), and Crane TP-410 for minor-loss K values.
The lateral
An 850-ft run of 6-inch DR-18 C900 PVC ties a new 4-lot commercial cluster into an existing 8-inch county main. The pump curve and static head give 65 psi at the pump discharge flange at design flow. Field layout includes two 90° bends and one fully open gate valve in the run. Design drawings give:
| Pipe | 6-inch C900 PVC, nominal OD 6.90 in; use D = 6.0 in for Hazen-Williams (ID ≈ 5.9 in — within typical tolerance) |
| Length L | 850 ft (centerline, including fittings) |
| Hazen-Williams C | 150 (new PVC; see C reference) |
| Design flow Q | 250 gpm |
| Pump discharge pressure | 65 psi at design Q |
| Fittings | 2 × 90° long-radius flanged elbows; 1 × gate valve, fully open |
| Velocity target | 3–6 ft/s per AWWA M11 transmission/distribution guidance |
Flow and diameter in Hazen-Williams form
The PE-Calc Hazen-Williams equation uses US customary units with Q in gpm, D in inches, and L in feet. Convert to cfs only for the velocity check.
Q (cfs) = 250 / 448.831 = 0.557 cfs
D (ft) = 6.0 / 12 = 0.500 ft
A = π(D/2)² = π(0.25)² = 0.196 ft²
Distributed loss along the barrel
AWWA M11 and most municipal hydraulic manuals use the Hazen-Williams formula in US units (valid for water at typical temperatures, turbulent flow, and pipe diameters above ~2 in):
Exponents (evaluate once):
Q1.852 = 2501.852 = 41,842
C1.852 = 1501.852 = 16,847
D4.87 = 64.87 = 5,992
Friction loss:
hf = 4.52 · 850 · 41,842 / (16,847 · 5,992)
hf = 160,629,164 / 100,907,624 = 1.61 ft
Confirm in the Hazen-Williams tool with L = 850 ft, D = 6 in, Q = 250 gpm, C = 150 → hf ≈ 1.6 ft.
Velocity-head method: hm = ΣK · V² / (2g)
First compute mean velocity (same value used for every fitting in this run):
K values (from minor-loss reference, flanged water-main fittings):
2 × 90° LR elbow, flanged: K = 0.20 each → 0.40
1 × gate valve, fully open: K = 0.15
ΣK = 0.55
hm = 0.55 · (2.84)² / (2 · 32.2)
= 0.55 · 8.07 / 64.4 = 0.09 ft
Minor losses are small here because velocity is low. If this were a 4-inch lateral at the same Q, V would exceed 6 ft/s and the fitting losses would dominate the friction budget.
Feet of head to psi at the end of the line
htotal = 1.61 + 0.09 = 1.70 ft
Pressure conversion (fresh water, ≈ 0.433 psi/ft at 60°F):
ΔP = 1.70 · 0.433 = 0.74 psi
Residual at end of lateral (pump discharge minus line loss, neglecting elevation):
Pend = 65.0 − 0.74 = 64.3 psi ✓
| Loss component | Head (ft) | Pressure (psi) |
|---|---|---|
| Pipe friction (Hazen-Williams) | 1.61 | 0.70 |
| Minor losses (ΣK = 0.55) | 0.09 | 0.04 |
| Total | 1.70 | 0.74 |
Pressure is not the constraint on this reach — the 850-ft run loses less than 1 psi. Fire-flow or peak-day scenarios at higher Q are where Hazen-Williams head loss actually matters on a 6-inch lateral.
Is V in the 3–6 ft/s range?
AWWA M11 recommends keeping distribution velocities generally between 3 and 6 ft/s to limit surge risk, water-age concerns in dead ends, and transient pressures — while staying below values that accelerate tuberculation or erosion in other materials. Check at design Q:
AWWA M11 target: 3–6 ft/s
Result: 2.84 ft/s < 3 ft/s — marginally below the lower bound
Flow needed for V = 3.0 ft/s in 6-inch:
Q = 3.0 · 0.196 · 448.831 = 264 gpm
Design-life friction and small-pipe limits
hf = 4.52 · 850 · 41,842 / (1301.852 · 5,992)
hf = 2.09 ft (ΔP ≈ 0.91 psi) — still minor at 250 gpm
At fire-flow Q = 500 gpm (illustrative, C = 150):
hf ≈ 5.5 ft (1.4 psi); V ≈ 5.7 ft/s — inside AWWA range
Beyond a single-pipe Hazen-Williams run
- No elevation profile. This example assumes level grade. A 40-ft rise adds 17.3 psi static loss not counted here.
- No pump curve intersection. We took 65 psi at 250 gpm as given. A full design plots the system head curve (static + friction + minor + PRV settings) against the pump curve to find the actual operating point.
- No water-hammer / surge. Closing a hydrant or power failure at the booster can produce transient pressures well above steady-state. AWWA M11 surge chapters and software such as KYPIPE or Bentley HAMMER apply.
- No equivalent-length shortcut audit. Some spreadsheets replace fittings with extra pipe length (e.g., 25 ft per elbow). We used explicit K values; equivalent-length methods should reconcile within ~10% for the same V.
Tools used in this example
Reproduce every step in the live PE-Calc tools: Hazen-Williams equation (friction head loss). The Hazen-Williams C = 150 came from the Hazen-Williams C reference card — “PVC, HDPE (new)”. Fitting K values came from the minor loss coefficients card. For comparison on the same diameter at higher roughness, run Darcy-Weisbach with PVC equivalent roughness.
Buying the lot? Check the water service before you buy.
Available pressure at the tap, main size, and distance to the county line all affect whether a 6-inch lateral is even feasible without a booster. Easements, floodplain limits, and utility conflicts show up in the feasibility review long before Hazen-Williams. SitePrior screens FEMA, NWI, NRCS soils, and USGS context for $29 in about 60 seconds. Run it before the pre-application meeting, not after the easement is recorded.