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How to calculate a fire sprinkler


system
 Category: Hydraulic calculation for fire protection engineers (/Table/Support/Hydraulic-calculation-for-fire-protection-

engineers/)

The long way - by hand


In this article, will demonstrate some of the basics for carrying out fire sprinkler calculations by the long hand
method with just the aid of a scientific calculator or our own hydraulic calculator - Hcal2 (/products/hcalc.html)
which you can freely download from our website.  

We will for this example use simple three sprinklers and three pipes which would of course be part of a much larger
fire sprinkler system. These basic procedures can also be used for calculating many other types of systems such as
fire hydrant, hose reel or the discharge from a water cannon or monitor we can also use the same principal for
almost all other water-based fire protection systems if we have a k-factor for the output device (fire sprinkler, water
mist nozzle and so on).

In this example, will we use a very simple system with just three sprinklers and three pipes this is often called a
range pipe or branch pipe, which is part of a larger tree system. A tree system is end feed, that is water is only fed
from one direction as opposed to a grid or loop system when water may arrive at the sprinkler head from more than
one direction. 

Below is a diagram of the three sprinklers and three pipes which we will calculate.  We have dimensioned the pipe
lengths and given each junction point a unique node reference number which we use throughout the calculations. 

For each pipe, we need to know the pipe length, internal diameter (ID) of the pipe and the pipe material so we can
determine the pipes c-factor, the table below summarises the pipe data which we will need for the calculation for
this example: 

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Node Ref  Pipe Size ID (mm)  Length (m) C-factor

130-120 27.30 3.20 120

120-110  27.30  3.20  120 

110-100 36.00  3.20  120 

We will also we will need some additional information such as the type sprinkler head, the area each head is
covering, the design density for each sprinkler head in the system.

For this example, we will use the following design parameters:

design density: 7.50 mm/min


sprinkler head: K-factor of 70 with a minimum pressure 0.5 bar
head area: 10.20 m2

In this example, we have kept it very simple and used the same sprinkler head for all three sprinklers but this may
not always be the case so again it way be useful to summarises the information in a table such as this: 

Node Ref  Design Density Sprinkler k-factor Sprinkler minimum Head area (m2)
(mm/min) pressure (Bar)

130 7.50 70 0.5 10.20

120 7.50 70 0.5 10.20

110 7.5 70 0.5 10.20

The first step is to calculate the minimum flow which will be required at the most remote sprinkler which in this case
is at node [130], this is a two-step process as will need to calculate the minimum flow required to satisfy the 7.50
mm/min design density and then find the flow rate from the sprinkler given the sprinklers minimum pressure
requirement, whichever is the greater flow will become our initial flow from the first sprinkler at node [130].

We will first calculate the flow given the design density of 7.50 mm/min and the area the head is covering, we do
this by multiplying the design density (/support-topmenu/support-basichydraulics/54-design-density.html)
by the head area:

Equation 1:

q1 = (design density) x (area per sprinkler)

In this example, this gives:

          q1 = 7.50 mm/min x 10.20 m2 = 76.50 L/min

The second step is to calculate the minimum flow from the sprinkler given the K-Factor and the minimum head
pressure by using the standard K-Factor formula (/support-topmenu/support-basichydraulics/27-k-factor-
formula.html):

Equation 2:

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q = kp0.5

Where

p = the required pressure


q = the required flow from the first sprinkler
k = the discharge coefficient of the sprinkler (k-factor)

In this example, this gives:

                q = 70 x 0.50.5 = 49.50 L/min

By comparing the two calculations above we can see that the minimum flow required from the sprinkler head will be
76.50 L/min as this is the highest flow rate from the two calculations and is required to meet the 7.50 mm/min
design density.  We can also see that the minimum sprinkler pressure of 0.5 bar is not sufficient to produce the
require flow rate so the next step will be to determine what pressure will be required to produce the require flow of
76.50 L/min at the first sprinkler head at node [130] we can do this by using equation 3.

Equation 3

                p = (q/k)2

In the example, this gives:

                p = (76.50 / 70)0.5 = 1.194 bar

We have now determined the minimum pressure and flow for the first sprinkler at node [130] which will be 76.50
L/min @ 1.19 bar the next step is to calculate the pressure drop in the pipe between node [130] and [120] and for
this we will use the Hazen-Williams pressure loss formula (/support-topmenu/support-basichydraulics/26-
the-hazen-williams-formula-for-use-in-fire-sprinkler-systems.html).

Equation 4

Where

p = pressure loss in bar per meter


Q = flow through the pipe in L/min
C = friction loss coefficient
d = internal diameter of the pipe in mm

We know that the flow rate from the sprinkler at node [130] is 76.50 L/min and this will be the flow rate in the first
pipe between nodes [130]-[120]. As the pipe has an internal diameter of 27.30 mm and has a C value of 120 this will
give us:

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The pressure loss in the first pipe is 0.027 Bar/m and the total pressure loss in the pipe is 0.086 bar. 

We now need to add the pressure loss in the pipe to the start pressure at the sprinkler head at node [130] which was
1.19 bar to find to pressure at node [120] and at the seconded sprinkler head at node [120] this gives us 1.194 +
0.086 = 1.28 bar. 

The next step is to find the flow from the seconded sprinkler head at node [120] to do this we will use the K-Factor
formula

Equation 5

This gives 70 x 1.2800.5 = 79.20 L/min from the sprinkler head at node [120] which we now add to the flow in the first
pipe node [130]-[120] to find the total flow in the second pipe [120]-[110] to find the total flow in the seconded pipe
which is 155.70 L/min.

Having found the total flow in the seconded pipe [120]-[110] we can now find the pressure loss in, to do this we will
use the Hazen-Williams pressure loss, formula 4 which we used above this gives us:   

We now add the pressure loss 0.317 bar to the pressure at node [120] to find the pressure at node [110] this give us:
0.317 + 1.280 = 1.597 bar

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We now need to find the flow from the sprinkler at node [110] we do this by using the k-factor given in equation 5 as
we now know the pressure at node [110] is 1.597 bar, this gives 70 x 1.5970.5 = 88.50 L/min from the sprinkler head
at node [110].  We now add this flow to the flow in the seconded pipe [120]-[110] to find the total flow in the third
pipe [110]-[100] which will give us the flow of 244.20 L/min. 

The last step is to find the pressure loss in the third pipe [110]-[100] and again we will use Hazen-Williams pressure
loss formula given is formula 4 above. However, the last pipe has an internal diameter of 36.0 mm so this gives us:

We now add the pressure loss in this pipe to the pressure at node [110] to find the pressure at node [100] this will be
0.189 + 1.597 = 1.786 bar.  We have now complete the calculation for all three sprinkler heads and have found the
source pressure and flow required for this system is:

244.20 L/min @ 1.786 Bar

This pressure and flow is offer referred to as the source requirement for the system and is the minimum pressure
and flow required for the system for it to be able to provide the required design density (in this example 7.50
mm/min) at the most remote head [MRH] at node [130]. 

You should also be able to see that only the Most Remote Head has the minimum requirement of 7.50 mm/min
design density and all the other sprinklers will have a higher pressure as they are hydraulically closer to the water
source so they will have a higher pressure and will discharge more water through the sprinkler this can be seen in
the table below: 

Node Ref  min Design Density Pressure  Flow from sprinkler Head Area Actual
(mm/min) (Bar) (L/min) (m )
2
Design Density

 130 [MRH] 7.50 1.194 76.50 10.20 7.50

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120 7.50 1.280 79.20 10.20 7.76

130 7.50 1.597 88.50 10.20 8.68

Sprinkler calculation step by step

1. Calculate minimum flow from the MRH with the sprinkler minimum pressure and k-factor
2. Calculate the minimum flow given the system design density and sprinkler head area.
3. If the calculation in step 2 is the highest flow demand, then calculate the required head pressure otherwise we
can use the minimum sprinkler pressure in step 1.
4. Calculate the pressure loss in the pipe.
5. Add the head pressure to the pressure loss in step 4 to determine the pressure at the next sprinkler.
6. Use the k-factor formula to determine the flow from the sprinkler head.
7. Repeat step 4 to 6 until you do not have any more sprinklers or pipes

Next  (/Hydraulic-calculation-for-fire-protection-engineers/reynolds-number.html)

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