🚒 FireOps Calc training reference

Friction loss calculator for fire hose

FireOps Calc helps firefighters estimate how much pressure is lost as water moves through fire hose, appliances, wyes, standpipes, and supply lines.

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Friction loss formula

The common coefficient formula used in many pump operator classes is:

FL per 100 ft = C × (GPM ÷ 100)²
Total FL = FL per 100 ft × (hose length ÷ 100)

The C value depends on hose size and hose construction. That is why FireOps Calc should pull hose data from the department setup instead of relying on one generic chart.

Worked example: 2½ inch supply line

Example: 300 ft of 2½" hose flowing 500 GPM with C = 2.

StepMath
GPM ÷ 100500 ÷ 100 = 5
Square the flow factor5² = 25
FL per 100 ft2 × 25 = 50 PSI
Total hose length300 ft = 3 sections of 100 ft
Total FL50 × 3 = 150 PSI

What changes friction loss?

💧FlowHigher GPM increases friction loss quickly because flow is squared.
📏LengthLonger hose lays add friction loss in proportion to length.
🚒Hose size and C valueLarger or lower-friction hose can reduce loss at the same flow.
🔀Splitting flowTwo lines feeding one engine can lower friction loss by splitting total GPM across both lines.

Use in training

A good friction loss calculator should not just give an answer. It should show the breakdown so students understand the effect of GPM, hose length, and hose diameter. That is the goal of the FireOps Calc web and mobile app versions.

FAQ

Why does GPM affect friction loss so much?

The coefficient formula squares the flow factor, so increasing GPM can increase friction loss much faster than many new pump operators expect.

Can two supply lines reduce friction loss?

Yes. If two equal supply lines carry the same total flow, each line carries half the flow, which can significantly reduce friction loss.

Should I use exact department hose data?

Yes. Department hose, age, construction, and local training standards may use different coefficients or field values.

Related FireOps Calc pages

Run the calculation in FireOps Calc.

Use the website calculator, install the app, or keep reading the training pages to build stronger pump operator habits.