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Manning's Equation Calculator

Open-channel discharge from Manning's roughness, cross-section area, hydraulic radius, and channel slope. Used for natural channels, lined channels, storm sewers flowing partial, and open conduits in general.

ft²
ft
ft/ft
ft/s
cfs

Defaults shown are a typical concrete-lined trapezoidal storm channel. Adjust to match your section.

$$ V = \frac{k}{n} R^{2/3} S^{1/2} \qquad Q = V \cdot A $$
V mean velocity · Q discharge · n Manning's roughness coefficient · R hydraulic radius (= A / wetted perimeter) · S friction slope (≈ bed slope for uniform flow) · k unit conversion: 1.486 in US customary, 1.0 in SI.

How to use this calculator

Manning's equation is the standard for steady, uniform flow in an open channel. Enter the channel's roughness coefficient, the cross-sectional area of flow, the hydraulic radius, and the friction slope. The calculator returns the mean velocity and total discharge.

For uniform flow, the friction slope equals the channel bed slope. For gradually varied flow, the friction slope is approximated by the bed slope but the depth varies — use a step method (standard step or HEC-RAS) for a real solution. This calculator is for the uniform-flow case only.

Manning's n roughness coefficient — full reference table

The roughness coefficient is the most uncertain parameter in the equation; small changes in n produce large changes in computed velocity and depth. Use the design value for the as-built condition; for natural channels, run the calculation at both endpoints of the range.

Manning's n values for closed conduits and lined channels
Material / surfacen (typical)n (range)
PVC, HDPE, smooth plastic pipe0.0100.009–0.011
Cast iron, coated0.0130.011–0.014
Concrete pipe, smooth wall0.0120.011–0.013
Concrete, trowel-finished0.0130.011–0.015
Concrete, float-finished0.0150.013–0.016
Concrete, unfinished (forms)0.0170.015–0.020
Corrugated metal pipe (CMP), 2⅔×½ in. corr.0.0240.022–0.027
CMP, 6×2 in. corrugations0.0300.027–0.033
Brick, mortared0.0150.012–0.018
Asphalt-lined channel0.0140.013–0.016
Manning's n values for unlined and natural channels
Channel descriptionn (typical)n (range)
Earth, clean, recently completed0.0180.016–0.020
Earth, clean, after weathering0.0220.020–0.025
Earth, gravelly0.0250.022–0.030
Earth, with grass0.0300.025–0.035
Earth, dense weeds0.0350.030–0.040
Stony bottom, weedy banks0.0350.030–0.040
Cobble bottom, clean sides0.0400.030–0.050
Natural stream, clean & straight0.0300.025–0.033
Natural stream, sluggish, weedy pools0.0500.040–0.080
Mountain stream, gravel + cobbles0.0400.030–0.050
Mountain stream, cobbles + boulders0.0500.040–0.070
Floodplain, pasture (short grass)0.0300.025–0.035
Floodplain, dense brush0.0700.045–0.110
Floodplain, light timber0.0800.060–0.120
Floodplain, heavy timber w/ down trees0.1200.090–0.160

Source: Chow, V.T. (1959). Open-Channel Hydraulics, Table 5-6. Cross-checked against USGS WSP 2339 (Arcement & Schneider, 1989) for floodplain values.

Worked examples

Example 1 — Concrete-lined trapezoidal storm channel

Given: Bottom width b = 4 ft, side slopes z = 2:1 (H:V), depth y = 2.5 ft, bed slope S = 0.005, trowel-finished concrete (n = 0.013).
Find: Mean velocity V and discharge Q.
A = (b + z·y)·y = (4 + 2·2.5)·2.5 = 22.5 ft²
P = b + 2y·√(1+z²) = 4 + 2·2.5·√5 = 15.18 ft
R = A / P = 22.5 / 15.18 = 1.482 ft
V = (1.486 / 0.013)·(1.482)2/3·(0.005)1/2 = 114.3·1.301·0.0707
V = 10.51 ft/s  ·  Q = V·A = 236.5 cfs

Example 2 — 36-inch RCP storm sewer flowing half full

Given: 36-inch (3.0 ft) diameter concrete pipe, n = 0.012, slope S = 0.01, half-full flow (depth = D/2).
Find: Discharge Q.
For a half-full circular pipe: A = πD²/8 = π·(3)²/8 = 3.534 ft²
Wetted perimeter P = πD/2 = 4.712 ft
R = A / P = 3.534 / 4.712 = 0.750 ft (note: same as full pipe, R = D/4)
V = (1.486 / 0.012)·(0.750)2/3·(0.01)1/2 = 123.8·0.825·0.10
V = 10.22 ft/s  ·  Q = 36.1 cfs

Hydraulic radius

The hydraulic radius is the cross-sectional area of flow divided by the wetted perimeter. For a wide rectangular channel where width ≫ depth, R ≈ depth. For a circular pipe flowing full, R = D/4. For partial-flow circular pipes, R varies with depth — see Brater & King's tables or compute geometrically.

Why the 1.486 factor?

Manning's original equation is dimensionally non-homogeneous. The coefficient k = 1.486 in US customary units (= 1 m¹ᐟ³/s converted to ft¹ᐟ³/s) preserves the SI form. In SI units, k = 1 and the equation reads V = (1/n)R^(2/3)S^(1/2). Different texts use different presentations; the math is the same.

Reference: Chow, V.T. (1959). Open-Channel Hydraulics. McGraw-Hill. The original publication is Manning, R. (1891). "On the flow of water in open channels and pipes." Trans. Inst. Civil Engrs. Ireland, 20, 161–207.

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