hi,
atmospheric pressure does have a part but when the height differential is so small it makes very little difference. Just a point worth noting as I see some people have stated that the atmospheric pressure pushes down on the bath water - this is true.
but it should also be noted that atmospheric pressure (around 1.01 bar) acts in all directions, so upwards downards, left right etc. hence it has an equal effect trying to push the water upwards.
As engineers we often talk in gauge pressure (which is what measuring instruments such as car tyre inflators measure).
absolute pressure = gauge pressure + atmospheric pressure
I think you are incorrect about the flow not being full bore after the trap, as soon as the plug is taken away, the entire length of pipe section should be full bore, the. Thats in theory but in practice I'm not too familiar with bathroom wastepipes
I would think that the effect of the plughole would be to reduce the flowrate down by adding turbulence to the water which bernouilli's equation cannot account for because it assumes the working fluid is inviscid (has no friction - therefore no turbulence)
I can definitely say that the use of smaller pipework will result in lower flow rate because flow rate is
Velocity x cross sectional area = Flow Rate
the Velocity is defined by your water column height, so a bigger cross sectional area results in larger flow rate.
I've made some best guesses here and some of the stuff may not be true in real life but the theory is good.
