Sharp-Crested Rectangular Weir Calculator
Discharge over a thin-plate rectangular weir from crest length and upstream head. Used for flow measurement in ditches, lab flumes, and small treatment-plant outflow structures.
Default C = 3.33 in US units (≈ 1.84 in SI) is the Francis coefficient for sharp-crested weirs.
When to use a sharp-crested weir
Sharp-crested weirs are accurate flow measurement devices for steady or slowly-varying flow in small to medium channels — typical applications include irrigation ditch metering, water-treatment plant effluent measurement, laboratory flumes, and stream gauging in ungauged watersheds. Accuracy is ±2–3% with proper installation.
Installation requirements
- Weir plate vertical, at right angles to flow.
- Crest sharp (not rounded). Rounded crest = broad-crested weir; different equation.
- Approach channel straight for at least 4× the channel width upstream.
- Head H measured at a stilling well at least 4H upstream of the weir.
- Free fall on the downstream side; nappe must be ventilated to atmospheric pressure or the weir becomes submerged and inaccurate.
Suppressed vs. contracted
A suppressed weir spans the full channel width — the channel walls suppress the end contractions of the nappe. A contracted weir is shorter than the channel width, allowing end contractions on both sides. The Francis equation reduces the effective length by 0.1H per end contraction (so 0.2H for two-sided contraction).
Range of applicability
The equation is valid for H/P ≤ 0.4, where P is the weir height (crest above channel bottom). For higher H/P, the approach velocity head becomes significant and the basic equation under-predicts discharge by 5–15%. For tall weirs (H/P → 0), accuracy is best.
Weir discharge coefficients — comparison
Different weir profiles have different discharge coefficients. Use this table to pick the right equation for the structure you actually have.
| Weir type | C (US, ft1/2/s) | C (SI, m1/2/s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sharp-crested rectangular (Francis) | 3.33 | 1.84 | Standard reference |
| Sharp-crested, with approach velocity correction | 3.27 + 0.4·H/P | 1.78 + 0.22·H/P | Rehbock equation |
| Broad-crested, square corners | 2.6–2.8 | 1.43–1.55 | Rounded crest, see broad-crested page |
| Broad-crested, rounded upstream corner | 3.0–3.1 | 1.66–1.71 | Spillway profile |
| Ogee spillway (USBR standard) | 3.97 | 2.19 | At design head |
| Cipolletti weir (trapezoidal, 1H:4V sides) | 3.367 | 1.86 | Compensates for end contraction |
| V-notch (90°) | 2.49·H1/2 | 1.38·H1/2 | Q = Cv·H5/2, low flow |
| Sutro (proportional) weir | varies | varies | Designed for linear Q-H |
Source: Brater, King, Lindell & Wei (1996), Handbook of Hydraulics, 7th ed., Chapter 5. USBR (1997) Water Measurement Manual, Chapter 7.
Worked examples
Example 1 — Suppressed weir on a 4-ft channel
Example 2 — Contracted weir for outflow measurement
Reference: USBR (1997). Water Measurement Manual (3rd ed.), Chapter 7. Original: Francis, J.B. (1855). Lowell Hydraulic Experiments. Also Brater & King's Handbook of Hydraulics, Chapter 5.