Hazen-Williams vs Darcy-Weisbach: When to Use Each on the PE Exam

Published January 2025 | 8 min read

One of the most common questions on the PE Civil exam involves pipe flow and head loss calculations. You'll typically have two equations to choose from: Hazen-Williams and Darcy-Weisbach. This guide explains when to use each and provides a decision flowchart for exam day.

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Quick Comparison Table

FeatureHazen-WilliamsDarcy-Weisbach
Fluid TypeWater onlyAny fluid
Temperature Range40-75°F (4-25°C)Any temperature
Pipe Size> 2 inchesAny size
Flow RegimeTurbulent onlyLaminar or turbulent
AccuracyGood for water systemsMore theoretically rigorous
ComplexitySimple, direct calculationRequires friction factor lookup
Common UseWater distribution, fire protectionChemical plants, research, any fluid

The Equations

Hazen-Williams Equation (US Units)
hf = 10.67 × L × Q1.852 / (C1.852 × D4.87)

Or for velocity: V = 1.318 × C × R0.63 × S0.54
Darcy-Weisbach Equation
hf = f × (L/D) × (V²/2g)

Where f = friction factor from Moody diagram or Colebrook equation

Decision Flowchart

Which Equation Should I Use?

  1. Is the fluid water?
    • No → Use Darcy-Weisbach
    • Yes → Continue to step 2
  2. Is the temperature between 40-75°F?
    • No → Use Darcy-Weisbach
    • Yes → Continue to step 3
  3. Is the pipe larger than 2 inches?
    • No → Use Darcy-Weisbach
    • Yes → Continue to step 4
  4. Does the problem give you a C value (Hazen-Williams coefficient)?
    • Yes → Use Hazen-Williams
    • No, but gives roughness (ε) → Use Darcy-Weisbach

Hazen-Williams C Values

Pipe MaterialC (new)C (20 years)
PVC, HDPE150140
Ductile Iron (cement lined)140130
Cast Iron (cement lined)130100
Steel (new)140100
Concrete130120
Galvanized Iron12080
PE Exam Tip: If the problem mentions "fire protection" or "water distribution," it's almost always expecting Hazen-Williams. NFPA standards use C = 120 for design calculations.

Darcy-Weisbach Friction Factor

The challenge with Darcy-Weisbach is finding the friction factor (f). You have three options:

Option 1: Moody Diagram

Look up f based on Reynolds number (Re) and relative roughness (ε/D). The PE reference handbook includes the Moody diagram.

Option 2: Swamee-Jain Equation (Direct Solution)

Swamee-Jain Equation
f = 0.25 / [log10(ε/3.7D + 5.74/Re0.9)]²

This gives the same result as the Colebrook equation but can be solved directly - perfect for calculators!

Option 3: Laminar Flow (Re < 2000)

Laminar Flow Friction Factor
f = 64 / Re

Worked Example Comparison

Problem: Calculate head loss in 1000 ft of 12-inch ductile iron pipe carrying 2000 gpm of water at 60°F.

Hazen-Williams Solution (C = 140)

Darcy-Weisbach Solution (ε = 0.0004 ft)

Both methods give similar results for this typical water flow scenario, which is why Hazen-Williams is preferred for its simplicity.

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