A mechanical subcontractor needs the airflow in CFM through a 16-inch x 10-inch duct at 500 FPM velocity before specifying the fan unit. You have the duct dimensions on the drawing and the design velocity from the engineer.
CFM = Duct area (ft²) × Velocity (ft/min)
Duct area = (W × H) ÷ 144 (inches² → ft²)
Example: 10" × 8" duct at 700 ft/min → Area = 0.556 ft² → 389 CFM (184 L/s)Velocity guide: Supply air: 600–900 ft/min · Return air: 400–600 ft/min · Exhaust: 500–800 ft/min
1 What this calculator does
Calculates airflow (CFM and L/s) through a rectangular duct from duct dimensions and air velocity. Shows duct cross-section area in both ft² and m². Used for mechanical ventilation system sizing and fan selection.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Duct area (ft²) = Width (in) x Height (in) / 144
Airflow (CFM) = Duct area (ft²) x Velocity (FPM)
Airflow (L/s) = CFM x 0.4719
Duct area (m²) = ft² x 0.0929
Airflow is the product of the duct cross-section area and the air velocity. The /144 converts square inches to square feet. CFM (cubic feet per minute) is the US/AU industry standard for mechanical ventilation -- most fan data sheets and HVAC references use CFM for duct sizing. L/s (litres per second) is the metric equivalent used in some Australian specifications. The calculator uses inches for duct dimensions because ductwork is specified and manufactured in inch dimensions even in metric-primary countries.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Area: (16 x 10) / 144 = 160/144 = 1.111 ft² | CFM: 1.111 x 500 = 556 CFM | L/s: 556 x 0.4719 = 262 L/sArea: (24 x 12)/144 = 2.0 ft² | Velocity: 1,200 / 2.0 = 600 FPMRequired area: 800 / 600 = 1.333 ft² | In square inches: 1.333 x 144 = 192 in² | Options: 16x12 = 192 in² (exact) or 14x14 = 196 in² (close)4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using metric duct dimensions (mm) instead of inches | Reading duct sizes from metric drawings without converting | Area calculated 1,550x too large -- airflow vastly overstated | Duct dimensions for this calculator are in inches. Convert mm to inches: divide by 25.4. A 400mm x 250mm duct is 15.75 in x 9.84 in. |
| Confusing supply and return duct velocity requirements | Using the same velocity limit for all duct types | Return duct sized too small -- creates excessive pressure drop and noise | Return ducts operate at lower velocities than supply ducts (400-600 FPM vs 600-900 FPM) to minimise suction noise at grilles. Size return and supply ducts separately. |
| Not accounting for fitting pressure drop in duct sizing | Sizing only for straight-duct velocity without equivalent lengths for bends and fittings | System underperforms -- fan cannot achieve design airflow due to excess resistance | For each 90-degree bend, add 10-15 equivalent feet of straight duct to the total duct length for pressure drop calculations. Complex duct runs with many bends require a full system pressure drop analysis. |
| Using FPM velocity that exceeds manufacturer rating for the fan or grilles | Calculating airflow without checking terminal unit ratings | Excessive noise at grilles or fan overloads -- system complaints from occupants | Always check the velocity and pressure drop against the fan curve and the grille manufacturer's maximum rated airflow. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
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