Metal Weight Calculator

Calculate the weight of metal shapes — plate, round bar, tube, square bar, and hex bar — from dimensions and density.

Calculator

How to Use

  1. 1
    Enter the Component Geometry

    Select the cross-section profile (round bar, hollow tube, flat plate, I-beam, hex bar) and enter the relevant dimensions and the length or quantity of components.

  2. 2
    Choose the Alloy from the Database

    Search for and select the alloy to automatically retrieve its density in kg/m³ or lb/in³; the density is used as the basis for all mass calculations.

  3. 3
    Read the Mass and Compare Alternatives

    The calculated mass is displayed in kilograms and pounds; use the 'Compare Weight' feature to see mass side-by-side for up to three alloys with the same geometry.

About

Mass estimation is a foundational calculation in structural design, manufacturing cost estimation, and logistics planning. For metal components and assemblies, mass is the product of geometry and material density, and the ability to quickly evaluate how alloy selection affects weight is directly relevant to cost and performance trade-off decisions.

The AlloyFYI Weight Calculator provides density data for over 2,000 alloy grades covering all major engineering metal families, organized by UNS number, trade name, and common designation. The tool handles the most common cross-section profiles used in structural fabrication and machined components, and supports both metric and imperial unit systems. The weight comparison feature is particularly valuable when evaluating material substitution for weight reduction: switching from carbon steel to aluminum alloy in a structural bracket, for example, immediately shows the mass saving (approximately two-thirds) while the material comparator quantifies the structural trade-offs that must be managed.

FAQ

Why does density vary significantly between alloy families?
Density is primarily governed by the atomic mass and crystal packing efficiency of the constituent elements. Magnesium (1.74 g/cm³), aluminum (2.70 g/cm³), titanium (4.50 g/cm³), steel (7.85 g/cm³), nickel alloys (8.0–8.9 g/cm³), and tungsten alloys (15–18 g/cm³) span nearly an order of magnitude. The dramatic density difference between aluminum and steel is why aerospace structures preferentially use aluminum despite its lower absolute strength, because the higher specific strength of aluminum (strength per unit density) allows equivalent structural performance at one-third the mass.
How much does density change with alloying additions?
Alloying additions change density in proportion to the difference between the added element's density and the base metal's density, weighted by the alloy content. Aluminum alloys vary only modestly (2.63–2.90 g/cm³) because typical alloying elements (Cu, Mg, Zn, Si) are reasonably close in density to aluminum. Nickel superalloys show more significant variation (8.0–8.9 g/cm³) because rhenium (21.0 g/cm³) additions, used to improve high-temperature strength in advanced turbine alloy grades, substantially increase density. For steel, the typical variation between carbon steel (7.85 g/cm³) and austenitic stainless steel (7.93 g/cm³) is small.
How is density measured for a new alloy?
The most accurate method for measuring the density of a solid metal specimen is the Archimedes principle using precision weighing: density = m_air / (m_air − m_fluid) × ρ_fluid, where m_air is the specimen mass in air and m_fluid its apparent mass when fully submerged in a liquid of known density (typically distilled water at a controlled temperature). This method is sensitive to 0.01% and can reveal compositional deviations in alloy production. Helium pycnometry is used for porous materials where the Archimedes method would trap air in open porosity.
What is the difference between theoretical density and apparent density?
Theoretical density (calculated from the unit cell parameters and composition) assumes a perfect, pore-free crystal. Apparent density of an as-manufactured component is always lower to some degree due to porosity, inclusions, and other microstructural defects introduced during casting, sintering, or powder metallurgy processes. For wrought (rolled, forged, extruded) metals, apparent density is within 0.1% of theoretical. For cast metals, porosity from solidification shrinkage may reduce density by 0.5–2%. For powder metallurgy parts, density is a key quality metric specified as a percentage of theoretical density (e.g., 95% T.D.).
How do I estimate the weight of a complex fabricated assembly?
For a fabricated structure, calculate the mass of each component individually using its specific geometry and alloy density, then sum the component masses, adding estimates for weld metal, fasteners, and coatings. Structural 3D CAD software can automate this when alloys are correctly assigned to each solid body. For preliminary estimates without a full CAD model, break the assembly into equivalent simple geometric primitives (plates, bars, tubes) and calculate the mass of each. Adding a 5–10% contingency for weld metal and miscellaneous hardware is standard practice in early-stage design.