Borewell Yield Test
Field flow measurement (bucket/volumetric) with accuracy notes.
Borewell yield claims meet the bucket: measure recovery-phase flow after sustained pumping, not the first optimistic minute. The number decides pump sizing and whether drip beats flood for this bore.
Field-grade accuracy: bucket ±5%, weir ±5–10%, float ±15–25%. Measure in the dry season too — the dependable flow, not the monsoon flow, sizes the turbine or the water right. Repeat three times and average.
Engineering estimate from published standards and typical equipment data. Site conditions, equipment datasheets and measured data govern the real result — confirm with a qualified engineer.
Use the free Borewell Yield Test online — Field flow measurement (bucket/volumetric) with accuracy notes. Runs instantly in your browser: no signup, no upload, mobile-friendly.
About Borewell Yield Test
Borewell yield claims meet the bucket: measure recovery-phase flow after sustained pumping, not the first optimistic minute. The number decides pump sizing and whether drip beats flood for this bore.
How to use Borewell Yield Test
- 1Set up the measurement per the method's field notes.
- 2Enter the measured dimensions/times.
- 3Read the flow in L/s and m³/day; repeat thrice and average.
Why use Borewell Yield Test?
- ✓Field methods that need a bucket, a tape and honesty — no instruments
- ✓Method-correct formulas: Francis weir, V-notch, float correction
- ✓Accuracy expectations stated, not implied
- ✓Per-hour and per-day conversions for water planning
Frequently asked questions
How do I measure stream or pipe flow without instruments?+
Three field classics: bucket-and-stopwatch for small flows (±5%), a temporary weir with a head measurement (±5–10%), or the float method — width × depth × surface speed × 0.85 (±15–25%). This tool computes whichever you set up; three repetitions averaged is the professional habit.
When should I measure flow for a project decision?+
At the worst honest time: the dry-season minimum decides hydro capacity, well yield and water rights — the monsoon number only decides flood protection. One measurement per season for a year builds the curve that sizing deserves; one impressive July reading builds disappointment.
How does the float method correction work?+
Surface water travels faster than the average across the section (friction slows the bed and banks), so surface-float speed × ~0.85 approximates mean velocity. Use a straight, uniform 10 m reach, an almost-submerged float (orange peel works), and several depth points for the average.
Why does a weir measure flow so well?+
It forces all water through a geometry where flow and head relate by physics: Q = 1.84·b·h^1.5 (rectangular) or 1.4·h^2.5 (90° V-notch). One ruler reading of head over the crest gives ±5% accuracy — which is why intakes and labs still use 19th-century weirs.
Embed Borewell Yield Test on your website
Want Borewell Yield Teston your own site? Paste this snippet into any HTML page — it's free, with no API key or sign-up. The tool loads in an iframe and keeps working exactly as it does here.
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