Duct sizing chart - pressure loss

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a duct sizing chart that indicates a change in accepted pressure loss limits for duct sizes over Ø800, with the upper limit decreasing to 0.7 Pa/m. Participants speculate that this change may be related to velocity issues, duct strength, economics, or noise concerns. One contributor suggests that the limit is more about velocity than pressure losses, citing the impracticality of high gas flow rates at excessive speeds. A link to the sizing chart is shared for reference. Understanding these limits is crucial for effective duct design and ventilation efficiency.
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I found this sizing chart for ventilation ducts. Notice the gray area for what I suppose is the accepted pressure loss area. What I wonder is why it changes as the sizes pass Ø800. From here on the upper pressure loss limit goes down to 0,7 Pa/m. Is this because of velocity issues or something else?
 

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That's something I should probably know, but I don't. It could be an issue of duct strength, economics, noise. I'm really not sure. I use a duct sizing calculator (rotary slide rule, basically) which has no similar markings. where did you get it?
 
I'm pretty sure it's a limit on velocity, and not on pressure losses. 200,000 l/s of gas rocketing through a pipe at 40 m/s is not within typical design limits.
 
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