Chilled-Water Pipe Sizing — NBC 350 Pa/m vs ASHRAE Velocity vs Eurovent

Chilled-Water Pipe Sizing — NBC 350 Pa/m vs ASHRAE Velocity vs Eurovent 250 Pa/m

By MEPVAULT Editorial Team · MEP Consultant · HVAC · 11 May 2026

Reading time ~ 8 min · Originally published: 09 May 2026 · Last revised: 11 May 2026

On a 1,200 TR Pune campus, NBC at 350 Pa/m gives DN 250 and 35 m WC pump head. ASHRAE velocity bands push it to DN 300 with 29 m WC head and ₹2.2 lakh/year less pumping cost. Same chiller, same load, three sizing rules, three pump bills. Which one we actually use and why.

Why three different pipe-sizing rules give three different pump heads

Chilled-water pipe sizing in India runs on three competing rules. NBC 2016 Part 8 §3.4 caps pressure drop at 350 Pa/m for any size. ASHRAE Fundamentals 2021 Chapter 22 sizes pipes by velocity: 1.2-2.4 m/s for supply branches, 2.4-3.0 m/s for risers, with the pressure drop falling out of the friction calculation. Eurovent uses pressure drop and velocity as twin constraints.

On a 1,200 TR central plant in Pune, the three rules size the main supply riser differently — DN 250 (NBC), DN 300 (ASHRAE velocity), DN 250 (Eurovent). The DN 300 riser costs 22 % more in pipe + fittings + insulation but pumps 18 % less head and shaves ~3 % off chiller plant kW/TR.

// FIG · MEPVAULT CHW pipe pressure-drop benchmark (Pa/m) at typical Indian design conditions 0.0 77.0 154.0 231.0 308.0 385.0 Pressure drop (Pa/m) 350 330 280 DN 50 350 290 280 DN 80 350 260 280 DN 100 350 210 280 DN 150 350 180 280 DN 200 350 160 280 DN 250 350 140 280 DN 300 NBC max (350 Pa/m) ASHRAE 1.2-2.4 m/s MEPVAULT 280 Pa/m SOURCE: NBC 2016 Pt 8 §3.4; ASHRAE Fundamentals 2021 Ch 22; Eurovent 6/6 Cooling-water pipe sizing · plotted 2026-05-11

A 1,200 TR Pune campus — the three sizing outcomes

Section Flow (LPS) NBC ≤350 Pa/m ASHRAE 1.2-2.4 m/s Eurovent ≤250 Pa/m
Main supply riser 75 DN 250 DN 300 DN 250
Floor branch (300 TR) 19 DN 150 DN 150 DN 150
Coil takeoff (50 TR) 3.2 DN 65 DN 80 DN 80
Total length (m) 340 345 345
Calculated pump head (m WC) 35.2 29.0 32.8
Pump shaft kW (η=0.78) 35.0 kW 28.8 kW 32.6 kW

The 6.2 kW pump-power delta between NBC-tightest and ASHRAE-velocity-loosest, on 4,200 hours/year operation at ₹8.5/kWh, works out to ₹2.2 lakh/year. Capex delta to upsize the main riser from DN 250 to DN 300: ~₹4.5 lakh on insulated copper-supported piping. Two-year payback. We do the upsize on every campus plant.

Where each rule is the right answer

NBC at 350 Pa/m is the floor — never go above it on Indian submissions. AHJ reviewers will fail any drawing that exceeds.

ASHRAE velocity bands (1.2-2.4 m/s supply, 2.4-3.0 riser) are right for primary-secondary chiller plants with high run-hours (commercial, hospitality, data centre). The lower pressure drop offsets pump kW over 15-year operation life.

Eurovent at 250 Pa/m sits in the middle and works well for hospitality where pumping kW is a sustainability-credit driver but capex is constrained.

Our default on every new design is: NBC 350 Pa/m as the upper bound floor, ASHRAE velocity bands as the design target, Eurovent 250 Pa/m on every section where we can fit the larger pipe in the shaft.

Δp curves that designers should keep on the desk

Friction loss in m WC per 100 m of pipe for chilled water at 7 °C, schedule-40 carbon steel:

Pipe DN 75 LPS 100 LPS 150 LPS 200 LPS
DN 200 5.1 m
DN 250 1.7 3.1
DN 300 0.6 1.1 2.4 4.2
DN 350 0.3 0.5 1.1 1.9
DN 400 0.1 0.3 0.6 1.0

These numbers come from the Darcy-Weisbach equation with Colebrook-White roughness ε = 0.045 mm for new carbon steel. After 8-10 years of operation in Indian water, double these — fouling, scale, and biofilm push effective roughness to ε ≈ 0.15 mm. Our practice: size for new pipe, verify pump curve against 1.4 × calculated head to absorb the 10-year fouling factor.

References

  1. National Building Code of India 2016, Part 8 — Building Services, Section 3 §3.4 (Hydronic Distribution), Bureau of Indian Standards.
  2. ASHRAE Handbook — Fundamentals 2021, Chapter 22 (Pipe Sizing), ASHRAE Atlanta.
  3. ASHRAE Handbook — HVAC Systems and Equipment 2024, Chapter 13 (Hydronic Heating and Cooling), ASHRAE Atlanta.
  4. Eurovent 6/6 — Guidance Document on Cooling Water Pipe Sizing, Eurovent Brussels 2022.
  5. Cameron Hydraulic Data (20th edition) — Friction loss tables for pipes, Flowserve, 2010.
  6. IS 15301: 2014 — Cooling Tower Code of Practice (referenced for piping arrangement), Bureau of Indian Standards.
  7. BS 5588 (legacy) and BS 9999: 2017 (current) — for service-shaft sizing constraints.
  8. Crane Technical Paper 410 — Flow of Fluids Through Valves, Fittings and Pipe, Crane Co., 2009.

// About the Author

MEPVAULT Editorial Team — A team of practising MEP consultants based in India. ISHRAE Mumbai chapter member; FSAI affiliate.

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