Input
Choose a unit system and a calculation method. Plates and allowances are optional.
Example data table
Sample inputs and typical outputs for quick verification.
| Scenario | Unit system | Method | Uprights | Beams | Bracing | Plates | Allowances | Total weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Warehouse bay | Metric | Weight/Length | 2.4 m × 8 pcs × 7.50 kg/m | 2.7 m × 12 pcs × 10.20 kg/m | 1.8 m × 10 pcs × 2.10 kg/m | 0.015 m² × 10 mm × 8 pcs | Waste 5%, Weld 2% | ≈ 557.9 kg |
| Retail rack line | Imperial | Area + Density | 8 ft × 6 pcs × 1.25 in² | 9 ft × 10 pcs × 1.60 in² | 6 ft × 8 pcs × 0.45 in² | 0.12 ft² × 0.375 in × 12 pcs | Waste 6%, Weld 3% | ≈ 796.0 lb |
Formula used
Use when section tables provide unit weight.
Weight = Length × Quantity × (Weight per length)
Use when you know cross-sectional area.
Weight = Density × Length × Area × Quantity
Plate weight = Density × (Area × Thickness) × Quantity
Total is adjusted by allowances: coating, welding, then waste.
How to use this calculator
- Select your unit system to match your drawings.
- Choose a method: weight-per-length or area plus density.
- For each group, enter length per piece and quantity.
- Enter unit weight or section area based on method.
- Add plate area, thickness, and quantity if needed.
- Set allowances for waste and connection steel.
- Press Calculate to view the breakdown above.
- Download CSV or PDF for review and records.
Technical article
1) Why racking steel weight matters
Steel quantity drives purchase orders, freight, and installation productivity. In racking projects, repetition magnifies small per-bay changes into large tonnage swings. Weight also informs floor loading checks, anchor selection, and safe lifting plans. It supports logistics planning for pallets, truck payload limits, and staged deliveries. A transparent takeoff reduces change orders and improves schedule reliability.
2) Reference densities and unit consistency
The default density is 7850 kg/m³ (about 490 lb/ft³), widely used for carbon steel estimates. If your specification uses stainless or special alloys, update density accordingly. Keep units consistent: lengths in meters or feet, areas in mm² or in², and plate thickness in mm or inches. For quick checks, keep density fixed and refine member inputs as shop details mature.
3) Two calculation paths for better coverage
Method A uses manufacturer unit weight (weight per length), which is typically the most accurate because it already reflects the true section geometry. Method B uses cross-sectional area and density to compute mass from volume. This is useful for custom cold-formed shapes, built-up members, or when catalog unit weights are unavailable.
4) Allowances backed by practical ranges
Estimating often includes allowances for handling waste and connection steel. Waste commonly ranges from 3–10%, depending on cut plans, packaging, and site constraints. Connection and weld allowances are frequently 1–5% to cover clips, stiffeners, small plates, and minor fittings. Adjust values to match your historical data and scope.
5) Using the breakdown to optimize design
The component breakdown highlights where weight concentrates. Beams often dominate when bay counts are high, while plates become significant with thicker base plates, larger anchors, or seismic detailing. Use scenario runs to compare member options, spacing, and plate thickness. Export CSV for bid worksheets, and attach the PDF for reviews and approvals.
FAQs
1) Which method should I use?
Use weight-per-length when you have catalog unit weights. Use area plus density for custom sections or when unit weight is unknown.
2) What density should I enter?
The default matches common carbon steel. If your project uses stainless or special alloys, enter the supplier density to improve accuracy.
3) Do I need to include plates?
Plates are optional. Include them when base plates, gussets, or stiffener plates are part of the scope, especially for anchored or seismic racks.
4) How accurate are the allowances?
Allowances are estimating controls, not code requirements. Set them based on your historical fabrication waste, connection detailing, and procurement approach.
5) Can I use this for cold-formed racking?
Yes. For cold-formed members, unit weight from the manufacturer is best. If using area, ensure the cross-sectional area reflects the steel thickness and profile.
6) Why does my total differ from shop drawings?
Differences usually come from omitted accessories, connector parts, or rounding in lengths. Confirm quantities, include plates and fittings, and align units with the drawing schedule.
7) What do the download buttons include?
CSV includes the main inputs and calculated totals for spreadsheets. PDF provides a clean one-page summary for sharing, approvals, and record keeping.