The Weymouth equation is one of the older equations but is still widely used for distribution and gathering systems. It was originally developed from data taken on small, low to medium pressure pipelines. When it is used for larger, high-pressure pipelines it is quite conservative, as it predicts values for Q which could be 8-12% low for gas transmission through long pipelines, the Weymouth equation is not recommended. The Weymouth equation is typically used for flow conditions:
๐น โ Transmission Factor
๐ถ๐ โ 11.18
๐ท โ Internal Diameter (in)
๐ โ Flow Rate (FT3/day)
๐ถ๐ โ 433.49
๐๐ โ Temperature Base (ยฐR)
๐๐ โ ๐๐๐๐ ๐ ๐ข๐๐ ๐ต๐๐ ๐ (๐๐ ๐)
๐ท โ Internal Diameter (in)
๐1 โ Upstream Pressure (psi)
๐2 โ Downstream Pressure (psi)
๐บ โ Gas Specific Gravity
๐ โ Compressibility Factor
๐ฟ๐ โ Pipe Segment Length including Expansion (mi)
๐๐ โ Gas Flowing Temperature (ยฐR)
๐ โ Elevation adjustment parameter
๐ถ๐ โ 0.0375
๐ โ Compressibility Factor
๐๐ โ Gas Flowing Temperature (ยฐR)
โ๐ป๐บ โ Change in Elevation (ft)
๐ฟ๐ โ Pipe Segment Length including Expansion (mi)
๐ โ Elevation adjustment parameter
๐ โ Velocity (ft/sec)
๐โ โ Volumetric flow rate (scf/hr)
๐ท โ Internal Diameter (in)
๐๐๐ฃ๐ โ Average Pipeline Pressure (psia)