Part-Full Pipe Calculator

Model part-full pipes for drainage and sewers projects. See geometry, friction, and discharge instantly today. Export results to reports, bids, and field logs fast.

Calculator

Use consistent units for all lengths.
Inside diameter is typical for hydraulics.
Enter either depth or percent full.
Must be between 0 and diameter.
0 to 100, converted to depth.
Flow uses slope and roughness.
Positive, dimensionless (rise/run).
Typical: 0.012–0.015 for smooth pipes.
Reset Exports use the last computed case in this browser session.

Example data table

Units Diameter Depth Slope S Manning n Area A Rh Q (Manning)
Metric 0.600 m 0.250 m 0.004 0.013 0.0796 m² 0.0926 m 0.1640 m³/s
Metric 1.000 m 0.500 m 0.002 0.015 0.3927 m² 0.1667 m 0.5336 m³/s
Imperial 2.000 ft 0.900 ft 0.003 0.013 1.0901 ft² 0.3380 ft 6.1260 ft³/s
These examples are illustrative. Your site conditions may require different roughness and slope values.

Formula used

Geometry (circular segment)
  • Radius: R = D/2
  • Central angle (radians): θ = 2·acos((R − y)/R)
  • Wetted area: A = (R²/2)·(θ − sin θ)
  • Wetted perimeter: P = R·θ
  • Hydraulic radius: Rh = A/P
  • Top width: T = 2·R·sin(θ/2)
Flow (Manning)

When slope and roughness are provided, discharge is estimated using Manning’s equation for uniform flow.

  • Discharge: Q = (1/n)·A·Rh^(2/3)·S^(1/2)
  • Velocity: V = Q/A
If you enter lengths in feet, Q is in ft³/s. If you enter lengths in meters, Q is in m³/s.

How to use this calculator

  1. Select your unit system and keep all lengths consistent.
  2. Enter the inside pipe diameter for the conduit.
  3. Choose depth input mode: depth or percent full.
  4. Provide the flow depth, or the percent full value.
  5. If you need discharge, keep “Compute Manning flow” enabled.
  6. Enter slope and Manning roughness, then press Submit.
  7. Review results above the form, then export CSV or PDF.

Technical notes

Design intent and typical applications

This calculator supports storm sewers, sanitary lines, and industrial drains where pipes run partially full. It converts field measurements into hydraulic geometry, helping engineers compare alternatives quickly. Use it during preliminary sizing, CCTV condition assessments, and rehabilitation planning, where depth observations or level logger data are available. The geometry outputs also help estimate storage volume in low-slope reaches and check surcharge risk near junctions.

Depth ratio effects on capacity

Small changes in depth can cause large changes in wetted area and conveyance. The tool accepts depth or percent-full, then computes the segment angle that defines the water section. Reporting depth as a ratio y/D improves consistency across diameters and simplifies comparison between sites. For operations teams, tracking y/D over time can reveal sediment buildup, infiltration, or pump control issues.

Wetted perimeter and hydraulic radius insights

Friction losses depend strongly on wetted perimeter and hydraulic radius, not only area. As depth increases, perimeter grows, but hydraulic radius may rise or flatten depending on geometry. The computed top width helps evaluate free-surface behavior, surface velocity distribution, and debris transport potential. When combined with velocity, these values support checks for self-cleansing criteria and abrasion limits in slurries.

Using Manning inputs responsibly

When slope and roughness are provided, discharge is estimated with Manning’s uniform-flow equation. Select roughness values that match material, joints, sediment, and aging. Keep slope as a dimensionless gradient, and confirm the assumption of steady, uniform conditions before relying on the flow result. If backwater, pressurization, or inlet control governs, consider hydraulic grade modeling and treat Manning Q as a screening estimate only.

Quality checks and reporting

Validate inputs against physical limits: depth cannot exceed diameter, and slopes should reflect surveyed grades. Compare “area vs full” and “Q vs full” to sanity-check whether partial flow is plausible. Exported CSV and PDF outputs support design notes, bid documentation, and construction records. For peer review, capture the selected unit system, roughness basis, and any safety factors applied to capacity.

FAQs

1) What does “part-full” mean for a pipe?

It means the pipe conveys flow with a free water surface, so the cross-section is a circular segment rather than a full circle.

2) Should I use inside or outside diameter?

Use inside diameter for hydraulics, because the wetted area and perimeter are based on the space available for flow.

3) What slope format is required?

Enter slope as a positive, dimensionless gradient such as 0.004. That equals 0.4% grade and represents rise divided by run.

4) How do I choose Manning roughness n?

Select n based on material and condition. Smooth liners are lower, while corrugations, sediment, roots, and aging increase n.

5) Why does Q vs full change nonlinearly?

Because area and hydraulic radius change differently with depth. Conveyance depends on A and Rh^(2/3), so capacity does not scale linearly.

6) When is Manning flow not appropriate?

Avoid it when the pipe is pressurized, affected by backwater, or controlled by inlets and outlets. In those cases, use energy-grade or dynamic modeling.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.