InzonexIndustrial Heat-Loss Calculator

Heat-Loss CalculatorReference › DN65 (2½″) @ 350°C

Heat loss from a DN65 (2½″) pipe at 350 °C

A bare DN65 (2½″) pipe running at 350 °C in 20 °C still air loses about 789 W per metre. Wrap it in 50 mm of removable wired mat 80 and loss drops to about 140 W/m — a 82% cut — while the outer surface falls to about 45 °C (touch-safe). Figures use the ASTM C680 steady-state method.

These conditions are typical of high-pressure or superheated steam headers and hot-oil supply lines. Bare metal at this temperature is a severe burn hazard and, near combustible residues or leaks, an ignition risk — so insulation is as much a safety as an energy measure.

Per-metre heat loss

QuantityBareInsulated (50 mm)
Heat loss789 W/m140 W/m
Heat loss (imperial)820.7 BTU/hr·ft145.5 BTU/hr·ft
Reduction82%
Outer surface temp~350°C45°C
Conductivity k (at 185°C mean)0.061 W/m·K

How much insulation thickness?

The same DN65 (2½″) line at 350 °C, with different removable-insulation thicknesses (wired mat 80, k≈0.061 W/m·K). Heat loss and surface temperature both fall as thickness increases — with diminishing returns past 50–75 mm.

ThicknessHeat lossReductionSurface temp
25 mm211 W/m73%73°C
40 mm159 W/m80%53°C
50 mm140 W/m82%45°C
75 mm111 W/m86%36°C
100 mm95 W/m88%31°C

Above 250 °C the calculator uses a wired mineral-wool mat (higher-temperature binder); confirm the hot-face material rating for superheated duty.

Example: a 50 m line with 4 valves

ResultValue
Heat loss, bare41.3 kW
Heat saved by insulation34.0 kW
Fuel energy saved320.1 MWh/yr
Money saved€22,407/yr
CO₂ avoided64.0 t/yr (≈ 13.9 cars off the road, 3,049 trees, 13.3 homes’ power, 148 barrels of oil, 262,164 km of driving or 64 transatlantic flights)
Payback (removable insulation)3.9 months

Assumptions. 50 m pipe + 4 valves (each ≈0.6 m bare pipe), 8000 h/yr, 85% boiler efficiency, €0.07/kWh fuel, 0.20 kg CO₂/kWh, 50 mm insulation at €250/m². CO₂ equivalences use US EPA / DEFRA conversion factors. Change any of these in the live calculator. Estimates for guidance — confirm with a site survey.

Run your own numbers

Adjust size, temperature, thickness, hours and energy price live — or get an exact heat-loss study and fixed insulation price for your equipment list.

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How hot is a bare DN65 (2½″) line at 350 °C, and is it dangerous?

The bare metal sits near the process temperature on a DN65 (2½″) line at 350 °C — far above the ~60 °C burn threshold and a serious safety risk. It also loses about 789 W/m, so insulation cuts the loss and returns the surface to safe-to-touch.

Related heat-loss tables

DN65 @ 120°CDN65 @ 150°CDN65 @ 180°CDN65 @ 200°CDN65 @ 250°CDN65 @ 300°CDN25 @ 350°CDN40 @ 350°CDN50 @ 350°CDN80 @ 350°CDN100 @ 350°CDN125 @ 350°CDN150 @ 350°CDN200 @ 350°CAll tables →