Hot Water Cylinder Size Calculator

Hot Water Cylinder Size Calculator

Determine the optimal hot water cylinder size for your household based on usage patterns and number of occupants

Household Information

Basic
Advanced

Size Recommendations

Recommended Cylinder Size 180L
Based on your household's estimated daily hot water demand

Available Cylinder Sizes

Small (80-120L) 1-2 people
Medium (150-180L) 3-4 people
Large (200-250L) 4-5 people
Extra Large (300L+) 5+ people
180L
Recommended Size

Hot Water Usage Guide

Fixture/Appliance Average Usage Temperature
Bath (full) 80-100 liters 40Β°C
Shower (8 min) 50-60 liters 38-40Β°C
Hand washing 5-10 liters 40Β°C
Dishwasher 15-25 liters 55-60Β°C
Washing machine 50-80 liters 40-60Β°C

AI Recommendation

For a household of 4 with medium water usage, a 180L cylinder provides optimal balance between capacity and energy efficiency. Consider a high recovery model if you have peak usage periods.

This calculator provides estimates based on industry standards. Actual requirements may vary based on specific usage patterns.

Β© 2023 Plumbing Solutions AI. All rights reserved.

Free UK Drainage Tool

Sewer Gradient Calculator

Calculate pipe fall, drainage slope and sewer gradient instantly. Covers UK building regulations, 1:40 / 1:60 / 1:80 / 1:100 fall ratios, soil pipes, waste pipes, mm drop per metre, and percentage slope.

Pipe Fall & Gradient 1 in 40 / 60 / 80 / 100 Soil & Waste Pipe UK Building Regs mm / % / Degrees
Introduction

What Is Sewer Gradient β€” and Why Does Pipe Fall Matter?

Sewer gradient β€” also called pipe fall, drainage slope, or pipe grade β€” is the vertical drop of a drain pipe relative to its horizontal length. In plain terms, it describes how steeply the pipe is laid. A correctly graded pipe allows wastewater to flow freely by gravity, carrying solids along with it. A poorly graded pipe causes blockages, standing water, and drain failure.

In UK drainage design, gradient is most commonly expressed as a fall ratio (e.g. 1 in 40, meaning the pipe drops 1 unit for every 40 units of horizontal run) or as mm drop per metre.

Self-Cleansing Velocity

The technical principle behind correct drainage gradient is self-cleansing velocity. UK drainage guidance recommends a minimum flow velocity of 0.7 m/s at design flow to keep solids moving through the pipe. If the slope is too shallow, velocity drops below this threshold and solids settle, building up into blockages over time. If the slope is too steep, water races ahead and leaves solids behind β€” equally problematic.

In short: The right drainage fall keeps waste moving without separating liquids from solids. This principle underpins every compliant drainage design in the UK.

What Goes Wrong With the Wrong Drainage Slope?

Too shallow a gradient causes:
  • Standing water in the pipe invert
  • Fat, oil, and solids settlement
  • Slow, gurgling drainage
  • Repeated and worsening blockages
  • Foul odours from stagnant waste
Too steep a gradient causes:
  • Water outrunning solids
  • Dry solid deposits left in the pipe
  • Erosion of pipe joints over time
  • Air entrainment and pressure loss
  • Trap siphoning on waste pipes
Calculator

Sewer Gradient & Drainage Fall Calculator

Enter your pipe length and either a fall ratio or a known total fall. Select a pipe size for compliance guidance. The calculator returns total fall in mm, fall ratio, mm drop per metre, percentage slope, and angle in degrees.

Drainage Fall Calculator
β€”
Total Fall (mm)
β€”
Fall Ratio
β€”
mm Drop / Metre
β€”
Slope %
β€”
Degrees

How to Use This Drainage Calculator

  • Pipe Length: The horizontal run of the pipe in metres (not the slope length).
  • Pipe Diameter: Select your pipe size to receive UK compliance guidance alongside the results.
  • Fall Ratio: Enter the ratio number only β€” e.g. enter 40 for a 1 in 40 fall.
  • OR Total Fall: If you already know the drop in mm (from a site survey or invert levels), enter that instead.

The calculator covers sewer pipes, foul drainage, soil pipes, waste pipes, and surface water drains. All results are in metric units, consistent with UK drainage practice.

Formula

Pipe Slope Formula: How to Calculate Drainage Fall

Pipe fall calculations are based on the rise over run principle. The formulas below cover every conversion you'll need for drainage design β€” from fall ratio to mm per metre, percentage slope, and angle in degrees.

Core Pipe Fall & Gradient Formulas
Fall (mm) = Pipe Length (m) Γ— 1000 Γ· Fall Ratio
Fall Ratio = Pipe Length (m) Γ— 1000 Γ· Fall (mm)
mm per Metre = 1000 Γ· Fall Ratio
Slope % = (mm per Metre Γ· 1000) Γ— 100
Slope (degrees) = arctan(Fall Γ· Horizontal Run)

Worked Example: 1 in 40 Gradient Over 6 Metres

1
Identify the valuesPipe length = 6 m Β· Fall ratio = 1 in 40
2
Calculate total fall6,000 Γ· 40 = 150 mm
3
Calculate mm per metre1,000 Γ· 40 = 25 mm/m
4
Calculate percentage slope(25 Γ· 1,000) Γ— 100 = 2.5%

Gradient Conversion Table β€” Fall Ratio, mm/m, %, Degrees

Fall Ratiomm per Metre% SlopeDegreesCommon Use
1 in 1283.3 mm/m8.33%4.76Β°Max for small waste pipes
1 in 2050 mm/m5.0%2.86Β°Shower / basin waste (steep)
1 in 2540 mm/m4.0%2.29Β°40–50mm waste, recommended
1 in 4025 mm/m2.5%1.43Β°Soil pipe / 100mm drain β€” steep end
1 in 6016.7 mm/m1.67%0.95Β°100–110mm β€” most common
1 in 8012.5 mm/m1.25%0.72Β°110mm drain β€” shallower
1 in 10010 mm/m1.0%0.57Β°100mm drain β€” absolute minimum
1 in 1506.7 mm/m0.67%0.38Β°150mm sewer β€” minimum
1 in 3003.3 mm/m0.33%0.19Β°225mm+ civil sewer β€” minimum
Fall Ratios

Common Drainage Fall Ratios Explained

UK drainage design uses a small number of standard fall ratios. Here is what each one actually means in practice β€” in mm per metre, as a percentage, and when to use it.

1 in 40
25 mm/m
2.5% slope · 1.43°
The steepest standard gradient for 100mm and 110mm pipes. Required by Approved Document H for a single WC connection. Best practice for all short residential drain runs.
1 in 60
16.7 mm/m
1.67% slope · 0.95°
The most widely used gradient for 100–110mm foul drainage in the UK. Balances self-cleansing velocity with practical excavation depths on typical residential runs.
1 in 80
12.5 mm/m
1.25% slope · 0.72°
Acceptable for 110mm soil and drain pipes where a shallower fall is constrained by ground conditions. Suitable where pipe carries adequate flow from multiple appliances.
1 in 100
10 mm/m
1.0% slope · 0.57°
The minimum permitted gradient for a 100mm drain under Approved Document H. Only suitable on longer runs serving multiple properties with sufficient flow to maintain self-cleansing velocity.

1 in 40 Fall in mm β€” Reference Table

A 1 in 40 gradient means 25 mm drop per metre. Use this table to quickly find the total fall for common pipe lengths at every standard ratio.

Pipe LengthFall at 1:40 (25 mm/m)Fall at 1:60 (16.7 mm/m)Fall at 1:80 (12.5 mm/m)Fall at 1:100 (10 mm/m)
1 m25 mm16.7 mm12.5 mm10 mm
2 m50 mm33.3 mm25 mm20 mm
3 m75 mm50 mm37.5 mm30 mm
4 m100 mm66.7 mm50 mm40 mm
5 m125 mm83 mm62.5 mm50 mm
6 m150 mm100 mm75 mm60 mm
8 m200 mm133 mm100 mm80 mm
10 m250 mm167 mm125 mm100 mm
12 m300 mm200 mm150 mm120 mm
15 m375 mm250 mm187.5 mm150 mm
20 m500 mm333 mm250 mm200 mm
Sewer Pipes

Sewer Pipe Gradient Requirements (UK)

The correct fall for a sewer pipe depends on its diameter and the number of properties or appliances it serves. UK sewer design is governed by Approved Document H of the Building Regulations and guidance from water authorities.

Minimum Gradient for a 100mm Sewer Pipe

For a 100mm diameter sewer pipe, the minimum gradient under Approved Document H is 1 in 100 (10 mm per metre) when serving more than one property. For a single WC connection or a drain serving just one appliance, the minimum recommended gradient is 1 in 40 (25 mm per metre). In practice, a gradient of 1 in 60 is the industry standard for residential 100mm foul drains.

Minimum Gradient for a 150mm Sewer Pipe

A 150mm sewer pipe can operate at a shallower minimum gradient of 1 in 150 (6.7 mm per metre). The larger bore moves higher volumes of flow, which maintains self-cleansing velocity at lower slopes. Recommended design gradient for 150mm is 1 in 80 to 1 in 100.

Approved Document H (England & Wales): For 100mm foul drains, the minimum gradient is 1:40 where serving only one WC; 1:80 where serving multiple appliances; 1:100 where flow is sufficient to achieve self-cleansing. Always use the steepest gradient that ground conditions allow.

Drainage Gradient Chart β€” Recommended Falls by Pipe Size

Pipe ØMin GradientRecommendedMaxmm/m (Min)mm/m (Rec)Typical Use
40mm1 in 251 in 181 in 124056Basin / shower waste pipe
50mm1 in 401 in 251 in 122540Bath / kitchen sink waste
75mm1 in 501 in 401 in 202025Multi-appliance waste
100mm1 in 1001 in 40–601 in 201016.7–25Sewer / foul drain
110mm1 in 801 in 40–601 in 2012.516.7–25Soil pipe / main drain
150mm1 in 1501 in 80–1001 in 306.710–12.5Adopted sewer
225mm1 in 3001 in 1501 in 603.36.7Main / civil sewer
Soil & Waste Pipes

Soil Pipe and Waste Pipe Falls

Inside buildings, soil pipes and waste pipes have slightly different gradient requirements from underground sewer drains. All are covered by Approved Document H.

Soil Pipe Fall (110mm)

A 110mm soil pipe should fall between 1 in 40 and 1 in 110. For underground runs from the house to an inspection chamber or sewer connection, the standard recommended gradient is 1 in 40 to 1 in 60. This gives 16.7–25 mm drop per metre β€” enough for reliable self-cleansing without requiring excessive excavation depth.

Falls steeper than 1 in 20 are not recommended for soil pipes as they can cause air entrainment and siphoning of trap seals in the appliances above.

Waste Pipe Gradient

Waste pipes (connecting basins, baths, showers, and sinks to the soil stack or drain) need steeper gradients than sewer pipes because they carry smaller volumes and have shorter, smaller-bore runs.

AppliancePipe SizeMin FallMax FallRecommended
Wash basin32mm / 40mm1 in 251 in 121 in 18
Shower tray40mm / 50mm1 in 401 in 121 in 18–25
Bath40mm / 50mm1 in 401 in 121 in 20–25
Kitchen sink40mm / 50mm1 in 401 in 121 in 20
WC (110mm horizontal)110mm1 in 801 in 201 in 40
Gully connection100mm1 in 1001 in 201 in 40–60

Shower Waste Pipe Gradient

For a 40mm shower waste pipe, aim for a fall of 1 in 18 to 1 in 25 (40–56 mm per metre). The minimum is 1 in 40 (25 mm/m). Keep the horizontal run to a maximum of 3 metres on a 40mm pipe before connecting to the stack, to avoid loss of trap seal. For wet rooms, 50mm pipework with the same gradient gives more reliable drainage over slightly longer runs.

Toilet (WC) Waste Pipe Fall

A WC waste pipe (110mm) connecting horizontally to the soil stack should fall at 1 in 40. For close-coupled WCs this is straightforward β€” the short horizontal distance means the total fall is small and easily achieved within floor depths. For back-to-wall WCs with a longer horizontal run, a minimum of 1 in 60 is acceptable.

UK Building Regulations

UK Building Regulations for Drainage Gradients

Approved Document H β€” Drainage and Waste Disposal is the primary UK building regulation governing drainage design in England and Wales. It sets minimum gradients, pipe sizes, and access requirements for all foul and surface water drainage systems. Scotland uses the Technical Handbook, and Northern Ireland has its own Technical Booklet N.

Foul Drainage Falls β€” Approved Document H Summary

Key Requirement: Gradients of foul drains must be sufficient to carry peak design flows and achieve self-cleansing velocity. The document specifically states 1:40 as minimum for a drain serving a single WC, and 1:80–1:100 where adequate flow from multiple appliances is available.
Pipe SizeServingMin Gradient (Regs)Best Practice Gradient
100mmSingle WC only1 in 401 in 40
100mm2–3 WCs / appliances1 in 801 in 60
100mm4+ WCs / multiple properties1 in 1001 in 60–80
150mmShared / communal drain1 in 1501 in 100
225mmAdopted sewer1 in 3001 in 150–200

Self-Cleansing Velocity β€” The Engineering Behind the Regulations

The gradient requirements in Approved Document H are derived from the principle of self-cleansing velocity. UK drainage guidance (including CIBSE and Water Industry guidance) specifies a minimum flow velocity of 0.7 m/s at design flow rate. For a 100mm pipe at 1:60 carrying typical domestic foul flow, this is easily achieved. At 1:100, velocity may fall below this at low-flow periods β€” particularly early morning or late evening β€” which is why 1:60 is the industry standard and 1:100 is reserved for cases where adequate peak flow is guaranteed.

Surface Water and Stormwater Drainage Falls

Surface water drains can be laid at slightly shallower gradients than foul drainage because they carry higher peak flows during rain events. For surface water drainage, 1 in 100 is generally acceptable for 100mm pipes. For 150mm+ pipes in flat terrain, 1 in 150 may be permitted, subject to hydraulic design calculations confirming adequate velocity.

Worked Examples

Step-by-Step Drainage Fall Calculation Examples

Example 1 β€” 100mm Sewer Pipe at 1 in 60 (9 metres)

1
ScenarioNew foul sewer drain Β· 9 metres long Β· 100mm pipe Β· target 1:60 gradient.
2
Total fall9,000 Γ· 60 = 150 mm
3
mm per metre1,000 Γ· 60 = 16.7 mm/m
4
Percentage slope(16.7 Γ· 1,000) Γ— 100 = 1.67%
5
Compliance check1:60 on a 100mm foul drain is fully compliant with Approved Document H. βœ“

Example 2 β€” 110mm Soil Pipe at 1 in 40 (4 metres)

1
ScenarioUnderground soil pipe Β· house to inspection chamber Β· 4 metres Β· 110mm Β· 1:40 gradient.
2
Total fall4,000 Γ· 40 = 100 mm
3
mm per metre1,000 Γ· 40 = 25 mm/m
4
Compliance check1:40 is standard for a 110mm soil pipe run. 100mm fall over 4m is very achievable. βœ“

Example 3 β€” 40mm Shower Waste Pipe (2.5 metres)

1
ScenarioShower tray to soil stack Β· 2.5 metres Β· 40mm pipe Β· aiming for 1:20 fall.
2
Total fall2,500 Γ· 20 = 125 mm
3
mm per metre1,000 Γ· 20 = 50 mm/m
4
Compliance check125mm total fall over 2.5m at 1:20 is achievable and gives good drainage performance. βœ“

Example 4 β€” Checking an Existing Drain (Is It Adequate?)

1
ScenarioExisting 100mm drain Β· 12 metres long Β· surveyed total fall of 80 mm only.
2
Calculate actual gradient12,000 Γ· 80 = 1 in 150
3
mm per metre80 Γ· 12 = 6.7 mm/m
4
Verdict⚠ Below minimum. A 1:150 gradient on a 100mm pipe is non-compliant and will block. Re-grading or upsizing to 150mm is required.
Common Mistakes

Common Drainage Gradient Mistakes to Avoid

1. Insufficient Fall β€” The Most Common Problem

A drain laid too flat β€” particularly below 1 in 100 on a 100mm pipe β€” cannot sustain self-cleansing velocity during low-flow periods. Fat, grease, and solids accumulate on the pipe invert and the blockage gets progressively worse. It is not a matter of whether the drain will block, but when.

2. Excessive Gradient β€” Steeper Isn't Always Better

On small-bore waste pipes, a gradient steeper than 1 in 12 causes water to accelerate ahead of solids, depositing dry waste in the pipe. On 110mm soil pipes, gradients steeper than 1 in 20 can cause air entrainment and siphon trap seals in connected appliances, allowing sewer gases into the building.

3. Backfall β€” A Hidden Disaster

A section of backfall (where the pipe dips and rises) creates a permanent trap for solids and water. This commonly results from poor pipe bedding (pipe settling into soft spots), ground movement, or careless setting-out. Always check invert levels at both ends of every run before backfilling and compacting.

4. Confusing Fall Ratio Direction

A 1 in 40 gradient is steeper than a 1 in 100. The larger the denominator, the shallower the slope. Many people misread this and install drains that are far too shallow, or dig unnecessarily deep trenches chasing a gradient that was already too steep.

5. Ignoring Invert Levels

A theoretically correct gradient is useless if the outlet invert sits below the connection point on the sewer, or if the pipe run gets so deep that excavation becomes impractical. Always calculate invert levels at both ends of a drain run alongside gradients, and check whether the outlet level is achievable.

6. Wrong Ratio-to-mm/m Conversion

A 1 in 60 gradient gives 16.7 mm per metre β€” not 60 mm per metre. The conversion is: mm/m = 1,000 Γ· ratio. This mistake is surprisingly common on site and can result in drain runs dug to completely wrong depths. Always use a calculator or the formula, and double-check before excavating.

Important: Always verify your drainage gradient against the applicable building regulations before backfilling. Remediation of incorrectly graded underground drains is expensive, disruptive, and may require re-excavation of finished landscaping or groundworks.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate drainage fall? +
Divide the pipe length in millimetres by your target fall ratio. For example, for a 5 metre pipe at 1 in 40: 5,000 Γ· 40 = 125 mm total fall. For mm per metre: 1,000 Γ· 40 = 25 mm/m. To go the other way (ratio from a known fall): pipe length Γ— 1,000 Γ· fall in mm = ratio.
What is 1 in 40 fall in mm? +
A 1 in 40 fall means the pipe drops 25 mm for every 1 metre of horizontal run (1,000 Γ· 40 = 25). Over a 6 metre pipe run at 1:40, the total fall is 150 mm. A 1 in 40 gradient is the steepest standard gradient recommended for 100mm and 110mm drain and soil pipes.
What is 1 in 60 fall in mm? +
A 1 in 60 fall means the pipe drops 16.7 mm per metre (1,000 Γ· 60 = 16.67). Over a 6 metre run this gives a total fall of 100 mm. This is the most commonly used gradient for 100mm and 110mm foul drainage in the UK β€” providing good self-cleansing without making invert depths impractical.
What is the correct fall for a sewer pipe? +
For a 100mm sewer pipe, the recommended fall is between 1 in 40 and 1 in 60 for most residential connections. The absolute minimum under UK Building Regulations (Approved Document H) is 1 in 100 when serving multiple properties. For a single WC, the minimum is 1 in 40. A 150mm sewer pipe can operate at a minimum of 1 in 150.
How much fall does a sewer pipe need? +
A 100mm sewer pipe needs a minimum fall of 10 mm per metre (1 in 100). The ideal is 1 in 40 to 1 in 60 (25–16.7 mm/m). The exact amount depends on pipe diameter, number of properties served, and flow rate. Use the calculator above to find the total fall over your specific pipe run.
What is the minimum fall for drainage? +
Minimum drainage falls vary by pipe size. For 100mm drains: 1 in 100 (10 mm/m) minimum. For 40mm waste pipes: 1 in 40 (25 mm/m) minimum. For 150mm sewers: 1 in 150 (6.7 mm/m) minimum. These are absolute minimums β€” always use a steeper gradient where ground conditions allow.
What fall should a soil pipe have? +
A 110mm soil pipe should fall between 1 in 40 and 1 in 110 (Approved Document H range). The standard recommended gradient for underground soil pipe connections is 1 in 40 to 1 in 60 (25–16.7 mm per metre). Vertical soil stacks do not require a gradient β€” only horizontal connections do.
What is the minimum gradient for a 100mm sewer pipe? +
The minimum gradient for a 100mm sewer pipe per UK Building Regulations (Approved Document H) is 1 in 100 (10 mm per metre) where adequate flow from multiple dwellings is guaranteed. For a drain serving a single WC or light load, the minimum is 1 in 40. In practice, 1 in 60 is the standard design gradient for 100mm residential foul drains.
How do I convert a fall ratio to a percentage? +
To convert a fall ratio to a percentage: divide 100 by the ratio number. So 1 in 40 = 100 Γ· 40 = 2.5%. 1 in 60 = 1.67%. 1 in 100 = 1.0%. Alternatively, take the mm per metre value and divide by 10: 25 mm/m = 2.5%.
What fall should a waste pipe have? +
Waste pipe fall depends on the appliance and pipe size. A 40mm basin or shower waste pipe should fall at 1 in 18 to 1 in 25 (40–56 mm/m), with a minimum of 1 in 40. A 50mm bath or kitchen waste should fall at 1 in 25 to 1 in 18. Maximum horizontal waste pipe runs: 3 m on 32–40mm pipes, 4 m on 50mm pipes.

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