A horizontal pipe has a sudden contraction from DN100 to DN80 Schedule 40 steel pipes. The water flows in the smaller pipe at 25 C with a flowrate of 3020 L/min. The pressure in the larger section is Pm 380 kPa. Deternmine the type of flow in the smaller and larger pipes. a) b) Determine the downstream pressure, P2. c) Calculate the percentage of error that would have occured if downstream pressure, Pa calculated using Bermoulli's equation.
Theory and Design for Mechanical Measurements
Measurement is a term that refers to analyzing a manufactured component regarding the degree of accuracy for dimensions, tolerances, geometric profile, roundness, flatness, smoothness, etc. Measurement always involves comparing the manufactured component or the prototype with a standard specimen whose dimensions and other parameters are assumed to be perfect and do not undergo changes with respect to time.Precisely in mechanical engineering the branch that deals with the application of scientific principles for measurements is known as metrology. The domain of metrology in general deals with various measurements like mechanical, chemical, thermodynamic, physical, and biological measurements. In mechanical engineering, the measurements are limited to mechanical specific such as length, mass, surface profile, flatness, roundness, viscosity, heat transfer, etc.
Basic principles of engineering metrology
Metrology is described as the science of measurement, precision, and accuracy. In other words, it is a method of measurement based on units and predefined standards.
![QUESTION 1
A horizontal pipe has a sudden contraction from DN100 to DN80 Schedule 40 stecl pipes. The
water flows in the snmaller pipe at 25 "C with a flowrate of 3020 L/min. The pressure in the larger
section is P 380 kPa.
a)
Deternine the type of flow in the smaller and larger pipes.
b)
Determine the dowWTIstream pressure, P2.
c)
Calculate the percentage of eror that would have occurred if downstream pressure, Pa
caleulated using Rernouli's equation.
d)
State the reason for the pressure difference between Part (b) and Part (c).](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2F676c860b-3af7-4a97-b3d2-f96a067517f0%2F836b5a99-a423-4cee-81ee-3e3d6cd6f75d%2F84uqi1r_processed.jpeg&w=3840&q=75)
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