It makes no difference whether it increases the design liquid by a large amount or a small amount. You cannot (meaningfully) add a number of meters to a number of millimeters. Both large and small lengths can be expressed in either meters or millimeters. The only difference is the size of the numbers.
Considering that you are working with lengths on the order of meters (about 20, overall) if Lcri is indeed .697mm it is not just small, it is negligible -- way smaller than your tolerances, or probably your measurement errors. If it is actually .697m (the unit is wrong rather than the value) it is still adding just a small amount.
If including units causes the answers to change, then either the inclusion of units was done incorrectly (the empirical equations were not properly adjusted) or the answers calculated without units were wrong. Possibly both.
I quite understand that including units in a calculation that was done without units is not a trivial task. The problem is that many of the constants in the formulae have, in fact, units, units which are unstated but implied by the units for the variables. To get correct equations these missing units must be restored. And restored correctly.
You can do that simply by adding units that cancel the input units and add the output units. But better would be to go back to the derivations of the equations and determining the proper units from there. Often the given constant is a combination of a number of meaningful physical quantities. The calculation of Lcri might include a hidden factor of the density of water, which is, in some common units, just one.
But if you don't do that then you have to manually verify, for every calculation, that not only are the dimensions correct but also that the units are compatible. No adding of lengths in meters to lengths in millimeters. Not a trivial task either.
As a separate side note, there is a question as to the input thicknesses. Are they thicknesses before or after corrosion? Some calculations seem to imply that they are before corrosion, other calculations seem to imply that they are after corrosion.
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� � � � Tom Gutman