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TEL: Total Effective Length Calculation Guide for HVAC Ducts

HVAC Duct Calculator Team ·

What Is Total Effective Length

Total Effective Length (TEL) is the combined resistance of a duct run measured in equivalent feet of straight duct. It adds together the actual straight duct length and the equivalent lengths contributed by every fitting in the run.

TEL is critical because the friction losses in fittings (elbows, transitions, takeoffs) are often as significant as the losses in straight duct. Ignoring fittings can underestimate resistance by 30% to 50%.

The TEL Formula

TEL = Straight Duct Length + Σ(Fitting Equivalent Lengths)

Each fitting type adds a specific amount of equivalent length based on its geometry and the turbulence it creates.

Equivalent Length Table: Metal Ductwork

Fitting TypeEquivalent Length
90° smooth radius elbow10 feet
90° sharp (mitered) elbow20 feet
90° elbow with turning vanes5 feet
45° elbow5 feet
180° return bend20 feet
Branch takeoff (tee)25 to 35 feet
Transition (size reduction)5 feet
Boot fitting (register)10 feet
Damper (open)5 feet
Supply register or grille5 to 10 feet

Equivalent Length Adjustments for Flex Duct

Flexible duct has a corrugated interior that creates significantly more friction than smooth metal. When using flex duct:

Multiply all equivalent lengths by 1.5

Fitting in Flex DuctMetal Equiv.Flex Equiv.
90° bend10 feet15 feet
45° bend5 feet7.5 feet
180° bend20 feet30 feet

Additionally, even straight flex duct has higher friction per foot than metal. Some calculations increase the straight length by 1.3 to 1.5 times for fully stretched flex duct, and even more if the flex is compressed or sagging.

Step by Step TEL Calculation

Example 1: Simple Bedroom Branch (Metal)

A branch duct from the trunk to a bedroom register:

  • Straight metal duct: 15 feet
  • One 90° elbow: 10 feet
  • One register boot: 10 feet

TEL = 15 + 10 + 10 = 35 feet

Example 2: Kitchen Branch with Multiple Bends (Metal)

A branch run to a kitchen with a complex path:

  • Straight metal duct: 25 feet
  • Two 90° elbows: 2 × 10 = 20 feet
  • One 45° elbow: 5 feet
  • One register boot: 10 feet

TEL = 25 + 20 + 5 + 10 = 60 feet

Example 3: Same Kitchen Branch in Flex Duct

Using flex duct instead of metal:

  • Straight flex duct: 25 × 1.5 = 37.5 feet
  • Two 90° bends: 2 × 15 = 30 feet
  • One 45° bend: 7.5 feet
  • One register boot: 10 feet (still metal)

TEL = 37.5 + 30 + 7.5 + 10 = 85 feet

Notice how the same physical duct run jumps from 60 feet TEL in metal to 85 feet TEL in flex. This is why flex duct requires larger diameters to deliver the same airflow.

Why TEL Matters for Duct Sizing

TEL determines how much friction rate applies to the duct run. The pressure loss formula is:

Pressure Loss = Friction Rate × (TEL / 100)

A longer TEL means more pressure loss. If the TEL is too long for the available friction rate, you need a larger duct to maintain the required airflow.

Impact Example

Using 0.08 friction rate:

  • TEL 35 feet: Pressure loss = 0.08 × 0.35 = 0.028 in/wg
  • TEL 60 feet: Pressure loss = 0.08 × 0.60 = 0.048 in/wg ⚠️
  • TEL 85 feet: Pressure loss = 0.08 × 0.85 = 0.068 in/wg ⚠️

The Longest Run Rule

When designing a complete duct system, always find the longest TEL run in the system. This run determines the friction rate for the entire system:

Available Friction Rate = (Available Static Pressure / Longest TEL) × 100

All other (shorter) runs in the system will have lower pressure drops at this friction rate, ensuring they receive adequate airflow.

Common TEL Mistakes

  1. Forgetting register boots — Every register connection adds 5 to 10 feet of equivalent length
  2. Not counting the takeoff — The branch takeoff from the trunk adds 25 to 35 feet
  3. Underestimating flex duct — Many installers forget the 1.5x multiplier
  4. Measuring flex duct compressed — Flex duct must be fully extended for accurate length measurement
  5. Ignoring dampers — Even an open damper adds 5 feet of equivalent length

Calculate TEL Automatically

Our HVAC Duct Calculator includes fields for the number of 45°, 90°, and 180° bends. It automatically calculates the total equivalent length and includes it in the pressure loss calculation.