by Tony » Mon Oct 27, 2008 6:58 pm
I would not worry too much at this stage about an exact discharge coefficient. Just try to figure out roughly what sort of design pressure drop you plan to have and, initially make yourself some home made orifice plates from the figures here at the Forum. Get the bench up and running, leak test it, and sort out any problems.
Only at that stage do you really need something serious to calibrate against.
Many people here have built benches from scratch with no outside help at all, and when finally checked against a standard reference orifice they were within a very few percent.
There are several very accurate ways to measure flow other than with an orifice. You can check an orifice against another flow standard and work backwards to calculate the discharge coefficient.
One such method is to use a floating gas bell. Just like the old gasometers. A large cylindrical inverted bucket floats in a large and deep tank of water. You feed air in, it rises, you allow air to escape it sinks lower in the tank. The internal volume can be very accurately measured, so by measuring the distance the gas bell rises or falls you know exactly the volume of air in cubic feet entering or leaving. This is ideal, because it works at constant pressure. The weight of the gas bell determines the pressure, but it is usually quite low.
We had a system exactly like this at a national standards laboratory I once worked at. It was a primary flow standard against which other things were calibrated. Unfortunately the entire laboratory was shifted interstate a few years ago, so I no longer have access to it.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.