Picking a pipe means balancing size, schedule, and the pressure it must hold. This calculator reads the real ASME B36.10 dimensions for your size and schedule, then applies Barlow’s formula to estimate the working pressure for steel, stainless, or copper.
How it works
Wall thickness and outside diameter come from the standard pipe table; the pressure follows Barlow’s thin-wall relation:
ID = OD - 2 × wall
S = yield_strength × design_factor
pressure = 2 × S × wall / OD
weight = 10.69 × (OD - wall) × wall (lb/ft, steel)
A higher schedule means a thicker wall, which raises the pressure rating but narrows the bore and adds weight. The design factor sets how much of the yield strength you are willing to use.
Example and tips
A 4 in Schedule 40 carbon-steel pipe has a 4.5 in OD and 0.237 in wall, giving roughly 2,650 psi of working pressure at a 0.72 design factor. Stepping up to Schedule 80 nearly doubles the wall and the pressure rating but cuts the flow area. Always subtract a corrosion allowance from the wall before calculating, and confirm the result against the ASME B31 code that governs your system before relying on it.