Sent on behalf of Dr. Guo, UCD:
According to the USGS study, flood flows from the watersheds below 8000 feet
are dominated by rainfall runoff, not snowfall runoff. CUHP is a rainfall
runoff model. The UDFCD leads the effort to maintain CUHP's consistency and
accuracy. The SCS method needs a detailed calibration before a regional
consistency and user's guidance can be developed.
TR 20-SCS was developed for rural areas, and TR 55-SCS was extended into
urban areas using peaking factors and adjustments to CN. CUHP applies a
similar approach of peaking factor to model urban flows. CUHP was calibrated
for waterway slopes up to 12%. Any waterways steeper than 4% need an
adjustment. In fact, any waterways having an invert slope >10% will carry
roll waves. This is more a hydraulic problem rather than a hydrologic
problem. In practice, we separate hydrologic approaches (to calculate the
channel flow Q) from hydraulic approaches (to calculate the channel depth,
D). I am not aware of any watershed model that was calibrated for steep
mountain slopes. The closest one might be HMS with Dam Break analysis using
very steep slopes. Good luck.
Dr. James C.Y. Guo, Prof, PE, Director of H&H Program
Civil Engineering, U. of Colorado Denver
Denver, Colorado 80217
(303-556-2849)
Guo's Webpage - Ctrl key+Click to read
http://www.UCDenver.edu