Roof Drainage

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The High Velocity Hurricane Zone

Roof Drainage Requirements

PRESENTED BY THE OFFICE OF


BUILDING CODE COMPLIANCE
Why is roof drainage so important?

 Roofs are typically designed for a 30 psf. live load.*


 One square foot of water, one inch deep, weighs 5.2
lbs.
 The maximum depth of water allowed by Code is 5”,
weighing 26 lbs./ft.2.
 It would take only one hour at the design rainfall rate
for 5” to accumulate.
 There are 3000 roof collapses a year in the USA,
many because of inadequate drainage. 2

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Roof Slopes

 A roof with a slope of 1:240 is considered the


same as a dead-level roof for a roof to be
considered to have a positive slope it must
have a slope of more than 1:240.
 The Florida Building Code Requires a slope of
1:48 or a ¼” per foot.*
 This is done to preclude ponding instability.
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SECTION 1515 HIGH VELOCITY HURRICANE
ZONES - PERFORMANCE REQUIREMENTS

 §1515.2.2.1 All roofing systems must be


installed to assure drainage.
 In new construction the minimum deck
slope shall be not less than
 1/4:12.

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Ponding Instability

 Ponding instability is a phenomenon that


occurs anytime that water accumulates on a
roof. When water accumulates on a roof the
roof deflects under the weight of the water
consequently, more water ponds and the more
water that ponds the more it deflects and
continues to compound itself until failure
occurs or the situation is remedied.
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Primary
Primary scupper
scupper could
could be
be easily
easily blocked.
blocked.
Overflow
Overflow provisions
provisions are
are not
not provided.
provided.
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All
All three
three roof
roof drains
drains on
on this
this section
section are
are
blocked.
blocked. No No overflow
overflow provisions
provisions were
were
provided.
provided.
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Debris
Debris blocked
blocked scupper.
scupper.
No
No overflow
overflow provisions.
9
provisions.
1/13/2005
Strainer
Strainer isis blocked
blocked with
with debris,
debris, but
but flow
flow through
through the
the top
to
of
of the
the strainer
strainer is
is still
still possible.
possible. 10

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11

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Properties of water

 Water weighs 8.33 lbs./gal.


 There are 231 in.3 in one gallon.
 There are 7.48 gallons in a cubic foot.
 A cubic foot of water weighs 62.4 lbs.
 A rainfall of 1 gpm = 8.02 ft.3/hr

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Where do we find drainage
information in the FBC?

 Chapter 15, Building Volume HVHZ 1514.4*


 Chapter 16, Building Volume HVHZ 1614.1
 Chapter 11, Plumbing Volume P1102.3
 ASCE 7-98
 Chapter 8 Code of Miami-Dade County
 Drainage design requires the coordination of the
Architect, Structural Engineer and Plumbing
Engineer.
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Building (Changed)

 HIGH VELOCITY HURRICANE ZONES -


GENERAL
§1611.1.7 In any conflict between ASCE 7 with
commentary and this code, the more stringent
requirement shall apply.
1612.1.3 No building structure or part thereof shall be
designed for live loads less than those specified in this
chapter or ASCE-7 with commentary, except as
otherwise noted in this code.

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HVHZ
 §1514.4.2 Overflow drains and scuppers. Where roof
drains are required, overflow drains having the same
size as the roof drains shall be installed with the inlet
flow line located 2 inches (51 mm) above the low
point of the roof, overflow scuppers shall be a
minimum of 4 inches (102mm) in height and shall be
placed in walls or parapets with the inlet flow line not
less than 2 inches (51mm) above the roof surface,
excluding sumps, or more than 4 inches (102 mm) above the roof surface
and shall be located as close as practical to required vertical leaders or
downspouts or wall and parapet scuppers. Overflow drains and
scuppers shall also comply with the Florida Building
Code, Plumbing, and §1616 of this code.* 15

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Florida Building Code Plumbing
 P1107.3 Sizing of secondary drains. Secondary (emergency) roof drain
systems shall be sized in accordance with §P1106 based on the rainfall rate
but with the sizing
for which the primary system is sized
adjusted by dividing the values for
horizontally projected roof area in Table
P1106.2, Table P1106.3 and Table P1106.6
by two. The minimum cross-sectional area of an
overflow scupper shall be three times the cross-
sectional area of the primary roof drain and the
scupper shall have a minimum opening dimension of
4 inches (102 mm). The flow through the primary system shall not
be considered when sizing the secondary roof drain system.
16

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Florida Building Code Plumbing (new)

 1107.3 Sizing of secondary drains. Secondary


(emergency) roof drain systems shall be sized in
accordance with Section 1106 based on the rainfall
rate for which the primary system is sized in Tables
1106.2, 1106.3 and 1106.6. Scuppers shall be sized to
prevent the depth of ponding water from exceeding
that for which the roof was designed as determined by
Section 1101.7. Scuppers shall not have an opening
dimension of less than 4 inches (102 mm). The flow
through the primary system shall not be considered
when sizing the secondary roof drain system. 17

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When are roof drains required?

 Unless roofs are sloped to drain over roof edges, roof drains shall
be installed at each low point of the roof. (HVHZ 1514.4)
 “Drains or scuppers installed to provide overflow drainage shall
be not less in aggregate area than as shown in Figure 1616.3, but
not less than 4 inches (102 mm) dimension in any direction and
shall be placed in parapets not less than 2 inches (51 mm) nor
more than 4 inches (102 mm) above the roof deck” (HVHZ
1616.3)*
 All roof systems must be installed to assure drainage. (HVHZ
1515.2.2.1)
 In new construction the minimum deck slope shall be ¼ : 12.
(HVHZ 1515.2.2.1)
18
 Primary drains are to be sized per Table P1106.2.
1/13/2005
Could a Scupper be Used as a Primary Roof
Drain?

 Where required for roof drainage, scuppers


shall be placed level with the roof surface in a
wall or parapet. (HVHZ 1514.4)*
 The scupper shall be located as determined by
the roof slope and contributing roof area.
(HVHZ 1514.4)
 Parapet wall roof drainage scupper location
shall comply with the FBC Building Volume.
Plumbing (1106.5) 19

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Using a Scupper as a
Primary Drain

 When using a scupper as a primary means of


roof drainage care must be exercised to direct
the water away from the building.
 The Code does not allow water to be drained
less than a foot from the wall of the building.

20

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When is secondary or overflow drainage
required?

 When roof drains are required. (HVHZ 1514.4.2)


 When roof perimeter construction extends above the
roof, where water would be trapped if the primary
drains allow build-up for any reason. (P1107.1)
 When parapets or curbs are constructed, water build-
up in excess of that considered in the design shall be
prevented. (HVHZ 1616.1)

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Structural Concerns

 No accumulation in excess of that considered in the


design. (HVHZ 1616.1)
 No more than 5” of water accumulation when not
designed per 1616.1. (HVHZ 1616.2)
 Depth caused by hydraulic head needed to cause flow
through the secondary drain shall be included in
determining the load. (HVHZ 1616.2)
 All roofs shall be designed with sufficient slope or
camber. (HVHZ 1614.4)
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What is Hydraulic Head?

 Is the amount of head needed to


cause water to flow out of a
drain or a scupper at a set rate.
 Example for a 4” roof drain to be able
to drain 170 Gals. Per minute it must
have 2” of head over the drain. With
1” of head it will only drain 80 G.P.M
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How do you size a primary drain

 First establish the projected horizontal area of


the roof (square footage) including any vertical
wall that drains unto the roof (do not include
parapets)
 Next establish the rate of rainfall. 4.7” for
Miami-Dade.
 Size as per Table 1106.2 of the Plumbing
Code.
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TABLE 1106.2

Only section of table that may be 25


used for Miami-Dade County
1/13/2005
Example #1
2500 sq. ft. of roof
area.

Minimum roof
pitch is ¼” per
foot.

Job is located
in Miami-Dade
County
Example #1

 With this information go to Figure 1106.1


Chapter 11 of the Plumbing Code. Or go to
Appendix “B” Rates of rainfall for various
cities . Here you will determine that the rate
for Miami –Dade is 4.7”. The commentary
tells us that we should go to the next higher
number in the table, in this case 5”
27

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Figure 1106.1
Plumbing Code
APPENDIX PB RATES OF RAINFALL FOR
VARIOUS CITIES

Florida:
Jacksonville 4.3”
Key West 4.3”
Miami-Dade 4.7”
Tampa 4.5”

Next you go to table table 1106.2


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Zoom version of
figure 1106.1

Miami-Dade

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Diameter HORIZONTALLY PROJECTED ROOF AREA (square feet)
of Leader
Inches
Rainfall rate (inches per hour)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
2” 2880 1440 960 720 575 480 360
3” 8800 4400 2930 2200 1760 1470

4” 18400 3680

5” 34600 6920

6” 54000 10800

8” 116000 23200
If you work your way down the 5” column until you get to a number
that is higher than 2500 in this case 3680 and follow that across to the
left it establishes a 4” leader.
It has been established that a
4” roof drain is required.
There is 144 cubic inches of
water in a 12” x 12” x 1”
deep section and there are
231cu. in. of water in a gallon
of water .
144 ÷ 231 ÷ 60 = .0104 gals
per minute per square foot.
.0104 is the gallons per
minute that fall on one
square foot of roof at a
design rainfall rate of
1”.
Since the rate of rainfall for Miami-Dade is 5” per hour the square footage of the roof
is multiplied by 5 then by .0104.
In this case 2500 x 5 x .0104 = 130 gals. per minute is the amount of rain falling on
that roof.
This is a 2500 sq.ft. roof
that according to table
P1106.2 requires a 4” roof
drain

After establishing the 130


gals per min. go to table
C8-1 in ASCE 7-98 and
find the hydraulic head

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This table comes from ASCE 7-98. ASCE 7- 98 is a Standard adopted
by the Florida Building Code

This is the table that is used to establish the hydraulic head of drains and
scuppers.
This table is found in the commentary
to the IPC and it is almost identical to
the one in ASCE 7-98
Roof Drainage

 130 gals per minute on a 4” drain you may


interpolate and obtain about 1 ¾” hydraulic head.
 This means that at its design capacity there is going to
be 1 ¾” of water over the drain, this is fine since the
code requires the roof to be designed in a way that
the maximum amount of water that can accumulate is
less than 5”.
 This means that the secondary drain has to be placed
a minimum of 1 ¾” above the roof. *
37

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Why the concern with hydraulic head?

 §1616.2 Where roofs are not designed in accordance


with §1616.1, overflow drains or scuppers shall be
placed to prevent an accumulation of more than 5
inches (927 mm) of water on any portion of the roof.
In determining the load that could result should the
primary drainage system be blocked, the loads caused
by the depth of water (i.e., head) needed to cause the
water to flow out the scuppers or secondary drainage
system shall be included.*
38

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When is secondary or overflow
drainage required?

 When roof drains are required. (1514.4.2)


 When roof perimeter construction extends
above the roof, where water would be trapped
if the primary drains allow build-up for any
reason. (1107.1)
 When parapets or curbs are constructed, water
build-up in excess of that considered in the
design shall be prevented. (1616.1)
39

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Roof Drainage

 The code requires that the secondary drainage has to be sized


using table 1106.2 and dividing the values by two.*

 1107.3 Sizing of secondary drains. Secondary (emergency) roof drain


systems shall be sized in accordance with Section 1106 based on the
rainfall rate for which the primary system is sized but with the
sizing adjusted by dividing the values for horizontally
projected roof area in Tables 1106.2, 1106.3 and 1106.6 by
two. The minimum cross-sectional area of an over-flow scupper shall be
three times the cross-sectional area of the primary roof drain and the
scupper shall have a minimum opening dimension of 4 inches (102 mm).
The flow through the primary system shall not be considered when sizing
the secondary roof drain system.
40

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As per the requirements of 1107.3 we have
created a table to accomplish this.

Diameter of Leader 4” 5” If you compare this table with


2” 360 288 1106.2 you will notice that we
3” 1100 880 have taken those values and
4” 2300 1840
divided them by two.
5” 4325 3460
6” 6750 5400
8” 14500 11600

Consequently we are required a 5” secondary drain.


Roof Drainage

The head over the primary has been established at 1


¾”, 130 gals per min on a 5” drain would give us 1
½” of hydraulic head. Place the secondary at 2”
above the deck with 1 ½” of hydraulic head this
would give us a maximum of 3 ½” of water on the
roof even if the primary were to become clogged.
There are drains that have a dam built in, or the drain
can placed at a location were the 2” above the low
point in the deck happens to be on deck.
42

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Example #2, roof slopes at ¼ in./ft. to a single interior drain.

90”

85’

3’ High Continuous Parapet


Size the primary drain for example roof #2.

 Roof area 90’ x 85’ = 7650 ft.2


 Rainfall rate for Miami =5”
 Read down the 5” rainfall column of Table
1106.2 until a projected roof area figure that is
equal to or greater than the sample roof area is
found. Then read across the Table to find the
required drain size.
 A 6” drain is found to be required. 45

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Establish the hydraulic head at the
primary drain for example roof #2

 To establish rainfall in gallons per minute. Multiply


square footage, times the Miami rainfall rate, then
multiply times the conversion factor.
 7650 x 5 x 0.0104 = 398 gal/min.
 Refer to ASCE 7-98 Table C8-1.
 Hydraulic head for a 6” drain, that must drain 398
gal/min., falls between 3” and 3.5”.
 Interpolation is necessary to establish an exact
hydraulic head. 47

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Establishing hydraulic head above the
primary drain

540 – 380 = 160 -- 3.5 – 3 = .5 -- .5 ÷ 160 = .003125


398 – 380 = 18 18 x .003125 = .05625
3 + .05625 = 3.056”
In this case is it worth the trouble to do interpolation?
.0625 = 1/16” Round it off to 31/16”?
Could overflow scuppers be used
to provide secondary drainage?

The easy way to figure this is to just divide the


distance from the primary to the parapet by 4
to obtain the height of water at the primary.
In this case divide 42.5’ ÷ 4 = 10.6”
consequently you could not use a scupper as a
means of secondary drainage.
You would have 10.6” of water on the roof
before it reached the scupper.
49

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Secondary Drain

 Piping must be separate. Why? (1107.2)*


 Secondary must discharge above grade. Why?
(1107.2)
 Discharge must be in a location where it would be
normally observed. Why? (1107.2)
 Height placement of the invert of the secondary
drain must be above the depth of water of the
primary drain at its design flow. This requirement
seems to be implied by the Code, though not
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explicit.
A secondary drain will be required,
how is it sized?

 The projected roof areas shown in Table


1106.2 must be divided by two.
 Then read down the 5” rainfall column until
a figure equal to or greater than the
projected roof area is found.
 Projected roof area 7650 ft.2

51

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Table 1106.2 with sizing adjusted by dividing values
by two

Projected roof area 7650 ft.2

Diameter of Leader 4” 5” 5”
2” 360 288 575
3” 1100 880 1760
4” 2300 1840 3680
5” 4325 3460 6920
6” 6750 5400 10800
8” 14500 11600 23200

Overflow drain size – 8” diameter


Establish the hydraulic head above the
secondary drain

 For an 8” secondary drain the head falls between 2.5”-


3”.
 2.5” +[( 398-340 ÷ 560-340) x .5] = hd
 2.5” + [(58 ÷ 220) x .5] = hd
 2.5” + 0.1318 = 2.63”
 If the primary drain could not handle the peak flow for
any reason, the secondary would accommodate the
design flow.
 At the design rainfall rate, there would be a depth of
water 2.6” above the secondary drain. 53

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This table comes from ASCE 7-98. ASCE 7- 98 is a
Standard adopted by the Florida Building Code

This is the table that is used to establish the hydraulic head of drains and
scuppers.
In this case the Hydraulic head will be 2.6” Roughly 2 ½”?
Alternate method

The GPM remains at 398. Subtract 340 from 398 = 58. Subtract 340
on the table from the 560 on the table = 220. Subtract 2.5” from the 3”
of hydraulic head on the table = .5. Divide .5 into 220 = .002272.
Multiply 58 x .002272 = .1318. Add .1318 to 2.5 = 2.6318 round off
to 2.6”.
Are the structural rain load
requirements of the Code met?
 Depth above the primary = 3.06”
 Placement of the invert of the secondary = 4” above the
low point.
 Depth above the secondary = 2.6”
 3.06” + .94” + 2.6” = 6.6”
 This depth of water exceeds maximum 5” load allowed
by the Code.
 Even if the secondary was placed with the invert at the
point of the hydraulic head of the primary you still have
5.66” of water on the roof.
 Even though the plumbing requirements are met, the 56

1/13/2005 structural requirements are not.


Secondary drain

Primary drain
The max allowed
by the code is 5”
Options

 Go to a bigger primary.
 Go to a bigger secondary.
 Or both.
 Or design the structure to withstand this rain
load.

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TABLE 1106.7
SIZING SCUPPERS FOR A 5” PER HOUR RATE OF RAINFALL
HORIZONTALLY PROJECTED ROOF AREA (SQUARE FEET)

HEAD IN LENGTH OF WEIR IN INCHES


INCHES

4 6 8 12 16 20 24

1 230 346 461 692 923 1153 1384

2 641 961 1282 1923 2564 3205 3846

3 1153 1730 2307 3461 4615 5769 6923

4 1794 2692 3589 5384 7179 8974 10769

Note: to adjust this table for other than a 5” design rain fall rate multiply the square footage on the table by 5
then divide by the local design rain fall rate. Example: For 4” of design rainfall rate a 4” long scupper with a 1”
head would accommodate 287 square feet. 230 x 5 /4 = 287
Flow in gallons per minute
Drainage system Depth of water over drain inlet or hydraulic head

1 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5


4 inch roof drain 80 170 180
6 inch roof drain 100 190 270 380 540
8 inch roof drain 125 230 340 560 850 1,100 1,170
6 inch wide open scupper 18 50 90 140 194
24 inch wide open scupper 72 200 360 560 776
6 inch wide 4 inch high closed scupper 18 50 90 140 177
24 inch wide 4 inch high closed scupper 72 200 360 560 708
6 inch wide 6-inch high closed scupper 18 50 90 140 164
24 inch wide 6-inch high closed scupper 72 200 360 560 776

This table is similar to the ones found in ASCE 7 98 and in


the Plumbing Commentary.

EXAMPLE: for a 24” long scupper with a 1” head take the


72 ÷.0104 ÷ 5 = 1385
Formulas

 To obtain the gallons per minute that fall on a given


roof at the rate for Miami-Dade County (5” per hour).
 There is 144 cubic inches in a section of roof 12” x 12” x
1”.
 There is 231 cubic inches in a gallon.
 If you divide 144 by 231 you obtain accumulation of
rainfall in gals. per hour per sq. ft.
 To obtain gals. Per minute divide the result by 60
 144 ÷ 231 ÷ 60 =.0104
 Square feet of roof x 5” x .0104 = gpm falling on the roof. 61

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Formulas
 Formula to calculate amount ponding water on the
roof:
V = 4p x W x L x D
 3 2 2 2

 V= Cubic Feet
 W= Width
 L= Length
 D= Depth
 Depth must be expressed in feet or decimal
of feet 62

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Formulas

 Francis Formula:
 Q =3.33 (b-0.2H)H1.5
 b = scupper with in feet
 Q = Flow in Cu. Ft. per Sec.
 H = Hydraulic head in feet (or height of
scupper)

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Formulas

 Factory Mutual Formula for Flow:


 Q = 2.9 b(H)1.5
 Q = Flow in gallons per minute
 b = Base or in this case width of scupper
 H = Hydraulic head or height of scupper

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Estimating Weight of Ponded Roof Water

V = 4p x W x L x D
3 2 2 2

Example; A pond 70’ long by 40’ wide and 7/8”deep at


the center:
V= 4 x 3.14 ¸ 3 x 40 ¸ 2 x 70 ¸ 2 x (7/8” ¸12) =
2

4.18 x 20 x 35 x .0364 = 106.67 Cu. Ft. = V

V= 106.67 Cu. Ft. x 62.4 = 6656.65 lbs ¸ 2000 = 3.3 Tons 65

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Flow in gallons per minute
Drainage system Depth of water over drain inlet or hydraulic head

1 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5


4 inch roof drain 80 170 180
6 inch roof drain 100 190 270 380 540
8 inch roof drain 125 230 340 560 850 1,100 1,170
6 inch wide open scupper 18 50 90 140 194
24 inch wide open scupper 72 200 360 560 776
6 inch wide 4 inch high closed scupper 18 50 90 140 177
24 inch wide 4 inch high closed scupper 72 200 360 560 708
6 inch wide 6-inch high closed scupper 18 50 90 140 164
24 inch wide 6-inch high closed scupper 72 200 360 560 776

This table is similar to the ones found in ASCE 7 98 and in the Plumbing
Commentary.
11' 0"
As per ASCE 7 98 Table
C8-1 a 12" wide scupper
with 2" of head will accept
100 gpm, and 2 1/4" will
accept 140gpm. .
4" roof drain

0' 4"
With 1 3/4" of head needed to make the
a 4" roof drain accept the 130 gpm and
1" of separation, the maximum distance
from the low point to the scupper is 11'
2500 Sq. Ft. roof and this only leaves 2 1/4" for the scupper
Slope 1/4" per foot
130 Gpm. to do its work or it will exceed the 5"
Head Rqd. 1 3/4" maximum allowed on roof.
0' 4"
THE END

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