Head, in short, is the height at which a pump can raise water up to.

In terms of fundamental units, it is a measure of energy per unit weight of water, expressed as an equivalent height of water.s

Head=EnergyWeight\text{Head}=\frac{\text{Energy}}{\text{Weight}}, this means that we express head in feet of water because lbโ‹…ftlb=\frac{\text{lb}\cdot\text{ft}}{\text{lb}}=feet.


But first, let’s define some fundamentals.

For flowing water, the mechanical energy consists of pressure energy, kinetic energy, and potential/elevation energy:

\text{Energy}=\text{Pressure Energy}+\text{KE}+\text{PE}
\text{Energy}=PV+\frac{1}{2}mv^2+mgh

Divide Energy by Weight,

\frac{\text{Energy}}{\text{Weight}}=\frac{PV}{\text{Weight}}+\frac{\frac{1}{2}mv^2}{\text{Weight}}+\frac{mgh}{\text{Weight}}

Weight, or W=mgW=mg

Emg=PVmg+ยฝmv2mg+mghmg\frac{E}{mg}=\frac{PV}{mg}+\frac{ยฝmv^2}{mg}+\frac{mgh}{mg} is how we could write our equation, now let’s start simplying.

\frac{E}{mg}=\frac{PV}{mg}+\frac{\frac{1}{2}v^2}{g}+h

So pressure head, hP is PV mg , or since we know volume equals mass divided by density V = m / ρ , we can substitute that into the equation to get P ( m / ρ ) mg or P ρg . The velocity head, hv is ยฝ v2 g and the elevation head, he equals h (or denoted by z in some texts).


Remember to make a point about using consistent units!

  • P = lb/in2 or lb/ft2
  • m = slinch or slug
  • V = in3 or ft3
  • v = in/s or fps

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