Precast U Drain Sizes, Configurations & Drawings | 300mm to 900mm Guide
Selecting the right size, configuration, and technical specifications for precast U-drain is imperative. What happens when you get it wrong? An oversized drain can amplify your project cost significantly, also increasing the installation complexity. On the other hand, an undersized precast drain can cause overflow, flooding, and maintenance issues.
At BRHCInfra, precast u-drains are available in a vast range of standard internal sizes, including 300 × 300 mm, 450 × 450 mm, 600 × 600 mm, 750 × 750 mm, and 900 × 900 mm, with larger or custom sections used depending on project requirements. Internal sizes refer to the internal width and depth of the drainage channel and primarily influence how much stormwater the drain can carry. The usual length of a unit across most sizes is generally 2 meters.
However, the internal size is only one part of U-drain selection for you. A drain’s load class (T25 vs T6 vs FT Flume) determines whether it is suitable for pedestrian zones, light-duty roadside use, industrial movement, or heavy vehicular environments. Separately, its configuration determines how the drain is installed and used: whether it is open, covered, perforated, installed along a road shoulder, or customised for a specific site condition.
Key Takeaways:
Precast U-drains come in various standard sizes, ranging from 300 × 300 mm to 900 x 900 mm, manufactured to accommodate and withhold different water flow rates.
Precast U-drain sizes are usually expressed as internal width × internal depth.
U-drain sizes are different from load classes. Load classes dictate specific reinforcement requirements and impact the structural strength and performance.
Specific applications require specific configurations: open, covered, perforated, heavy-duty, shoulder-side, custom-sized.
The Three Main Decisions in U Drain Selection
Standard Precast U-Drain Sizes
BRHCInfra manufactures precast U-drains in multiple standard configurations, with custom sizing available depending on project requirements. Precast U-drain sizes are usually expressed as:
Internal width × internal depth
For example, a 450 × 450 mm U-drain typically means the clear internal channel width is 450 mm and the clear internal depth is 450 mm.
Sizes scale upwards to accommodate varying water flow rates.
- Small/Medium Range: 300×300, 300×450, 450×450, 500 x300, and 600×600
- Large Range: 750 x750, 900×900, and 1200×1200
For even larger sizes, you can consider FT Flumes.
Common Size Range & U-Drain Drawing
| Size (mm) | Dimensions of U Shape Drain (mm) | Ref. Wt. (kg) |
| a x b | L | A | B | H | a | b | c | d | e | f | |
| 300 X 300 | 2000 | 540 | 420 | 480 | 300 | 300 | 110 | 70 | 70 | 280 | 435 |
| 450 X 450 | 2000 | 700 | 590 | 660 | 450 | 450 | 130 | 80 | 80 | 430 | 657 |
| 600 X 600 | 2000 | 860 | 730 | 835 | 600 | 600 | 145 | 90 | 90 | 550 | 890 |
| 750 X 750 | 2000 | 1050 | 890 | 1000 | 750 | 750 | 150 | 100 | 100 | 690 | 1200 |
| 900 X 900 | 2000 | 1200 | 1070 | 1170 | 900 | 900 | 150 | 120 | 120 | 830 | 1646 |
Note: These sizes are indicative. Final selection should be based on hydraulic calculations, site gradient, catchment area, rainfall intensity, traffic conditions, and maintenance requirements.
Sizes x Common Applications
| U-Drain Size | Typical Use Case | Suitable Environment |
| 300 × 300 mm | Light stormwater collection | Pedestrian areas, landscaped zones, small site roads |
| 450 × 450 mm | Medium roadside drainage | Urban roads, service roads, institutional campuses |
| 600 × 600 mm | Higher stormwater capacity | Industrial roads, factories, logistics parks |
| 750 × 750 mm | Large site drainage | Heavy industrial areas, highways, large campuses |
| 900 × 900 mm and above | High-volume stormwater conveyance | Major infrastructure projects, highways, large catchments |
How to Select the Right U-Drain Size for Your Project
The right U-drain size depends on the expected stormwater flow and the physical constraints of the site.
Key factors include:
1. Catchment Area
The larger the catchment area, the more runoff the drain may need to carry.
2. Rainfall Intensity
High-rainfall and monsoon-prone regions often require higher-capacity stormwater systems.
3. Site Gradient
Drain slope affects how quickly water moves through the channel.
4. Drainage Length
Longer drainage runs may require careful slope planning, intermediate chambers, and maintenance access.
5. Surface Type
Paved surfaces generate more runoff than unpaved or landscaped areas.
6. Discharge Point
The drain must be sized to move water efficiently toward the final outlet, chamber, culvert, or stormwater network.
7. Maintenance Access
Larger or covered drains should be planned with cleaning and inspection access in mind.
U-Drain Size vs Load Class: What Is the Difference?
This is one of the most important distinctions in drainage selection.
U-Drain Size
Size answers the question:
How much water does the drain need to carry?
It depends on:
- Rainfall intensity
- Catchment area
- Surface runoff
- Site slope
- Drainage length
- Discharge requirement
- Maintenance access
U-Drain Load Class
Load class answers the question:
What kind of traffic or loading will the drain experience?
It depends on:
- Pedestrian movement
- Light vehicle movement
- Heavy vehicle movement
- Truck traffic
- Road shoulder conditions
- Industrial traffic
- Expected wheel loads
A 600 × 600 mm drain may have high hydraulic capacity, but that does not automatically make it suitable for heavy vehicular traffic. Similarly, a smaller drain may be structurally reinforced for a specific load requirement.
The correct selection must consider both water flow and structural loading.
How to Choose the Right Load Class? Learn More Here
Types of Precast U-Drain Configurations Explained
| Configuration Type | Description | Typical Applications | Key Considerations |
| Open U-Drain | Open-top drainage channel for direct stormwater collection and easy inspection access | Roadside drainage, industrial corridors, highway shoulders | Easier cleaning and inspection, but requires open access space |
| Covered U-Drain | U-drain fitted with RCC or heavy-duty covers for surface continuity and safety | Urban roads, industrial campuses, pedestrian zones | Cover design must match expected traffic/load conditions |
| Perforated Covered U-Drain | Covered drain with perforated openings allowing surface runoff entry | Footpaths, roadside edges, urban infrastructure | Combines safety with distributed water entry |
| Heavy-Duty Vehicular U-Drain | Structurally reinforced drainage system designed for vehicular environments | Highways, logistics parks, truck movement zones | Load class selection becomes critical |
| Shoulder-Side U-Drain | Longitudinal drain placed along road shoulders for stormwater conveyance | Highways, arterial roads, infrastructure corridors | Requires proper alignment and slope continuity |
| Deep-Section U-Drain | Higher-depth configuration designed for larger stormwater volumes | Large industrial sites, high-flow drainage corridors | Requires hydraulic design and installation planning |
| Utility-Integrated U-Drain | Drainage system configured alongside utility or cable infrastructure | Industrial plants, smart city projects, utility corridors | Coordination with utility layout and maintenance access required |
| Custom U-Drain Configuration | Site-specific dimensions or structural modifications based on project needs | Airports, infrastructure projects, special applications | Should be supported by hydraulic and structural design inputs |
Which U-Drain to Use – Application-Wise Selection Guide
Urban Roads
Urban roads typically require moderate-capacity drains with safe surface integration. Covered or perforated systems may be preferred in pedestrian-heavy areas.
Common requirements:
- Moderate stormwater capacity
- Covered sections where needed
- Easy maintenance access
- Integration with kerbs, roads, and footpaths
Highways
Highways require drainage systems that can quickly move runoff away from the pavement and shoulder.
Common requirements:
- High stormwater capacity
- Longitudinal roadside drainage
- Heavy-duty load suitability near traffic zones
- Durable installation and alignment
- Maintenance access over long runs
Industrial Plants
Industrial sites often have large paved surfaces, heavy vehicle movement, and high runoff concentration.
Common requirements:
- Higher-capacity drainage
- Heavy-duty load class where vehicles operate
- Covered sections in movement areas
- Resistance to site wear and maintenance challenges
Logistics Parks and Warehouses
Logistics parks need drainage systems that can handle large paved yards and repeated truck movement.
Common requirements:
- High runoff management
- Heavy-duty covers in movement zones
- Larger drain sizes for paved catchments
- Safe and accessible layouts
Airports and Institutional Projects
Airports and institutional sites need reliable drainage with strong execution quality and long service life.
Common requirements:
- High dimensional consistency
- Long drainage runs
- Clean installation
- Durable precast systems
- Project-specific sizing and configuration
Common Mistakes in U-Drain Selection
Mistake 1: Treating Size and Load Class as the Same Thing
A larger drain is not automatically suitable for heavier traffic. Size addresses water capacity. Load class addresses structural performance.
Mistake 2: Selecting Only by Standard Size
Standard sizes are useful references, but actual selection should consider rainfall, catchment, slope, discharge, and site usage.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Cover Load
If the drain is covered, the cover must also be suitable for the expected load and traffic condition.
Mistake 4: Under sizing for Monsoon Runoff
In high-rainfall regions, undersized drains can lead to overflow, waterlogging, and repeated maintenance issues.
Mistake 5: Poor Installation Planning
Even the right drain can underperform if bedding, slope, alignment, jointing, and compaction are not handled properly.
Precast U-Drain Selection Checklist
Before selecting a precast U-drain, evaluate:
- Required hydraulic capacity
- Catchment area
- Rainfall intensity
- Road or site gradient
- Installation depth
- Traffic exposure
- Required load class
- Open vs covered configuration
- Cover type and cover load
- Maintenance access
- Discharge point
- Project-specific customisation needs
This ensures the selected drain is not only the right size, but also the right structural and functional configuration for the project.
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