Backflow Preventer Pressure Loss Calculator
Calculate the pressure loss (head loss) across a backflow preventer device based on flow rate, pipe size, and device type using the resistance coefficient (K-value) method.
Results will appear here.
Formulas Used
1. Flow Velocity:
V = Q / A where A = (π/4) × D²
Q = volumetric flow rate (ft³/s), D = pipe inner diameter (ft)
2. Head Loss (K-Value / Resistance Coefficient Method):
hL = K × V² / (2g)
K = resistance coefficient (dimensionless, device- and size-specific), g = 32.174 ft/s²
3. Pressure Loss:
ΔP (psi) = ρ × hL / 144
ρ = water density (lb/ft³) at the given temperature
4. Unit Conversions:
1 GPM = 0.002228 ft³/s | 1 PSI = 2.3077 ft of water | 1 PSI = 6.89476 kPa
Assumptions & References
- K-values are conservative mid-range values derived from AWWA Manual M14 (Recommended Practice for Backflow Prevention and Cross-Connection Control), USC Foundation for Cross-Connection Control guidelines, and published manufacturer data (Watts, Febco, Wilkins).
- Actual K-values vary by manufacturer and model; always verify with the specific device's published pressure loss curve or table.
- Water density is calculated using a polynomial approximation valid from 32°F to 212°F (CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics).
- Pipe diameters used are nominal sizes; actual inner diameters may vary slightly by schedule — this introduces a small error (<5% for Schedule 40).
- Flow is assumed to be fully turbulent (high Reynolds number), which is the standard assumption for the K-value method at typical service velocities.
- Velocity warning threshold of 8 ft/s follows AWWA and plumbing code guidance for water service piping.
- Air Gap devices provide complete physical separation; no downstream pressure is maintained and pressure loss is not quantifiable in the same manner.
- RPZ assemblies typically have the highest pressure loss due to the differential pressure relief valve; DCVA assemblies have lower loss.