Plan brake work faster with configurable bend parameters for each job today. Compare outside or inside dimensions, then download neat summaries instantly for crews.
| Example | Units | T | K | Dimensioning | Bends | Flanges | Angles | R | Flat Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brake part | mm | 1.5 | 0.42 | Outside | 2 | 30, 50, 40 | 90°, 45° | 2.0, 2.0 | 116.297 |
Numbers are rounded; your shop factors may differ.
Angle conversion: A(rad) = A(deg) × π / 180
Setback (SB): SB = (R + T) × tan(A/2)
Bend allowance (BA):
Bend deduction (BD): BD = 2×SB − BA
Flat length:
If you enter BD directly, the calculator back-solves BA for reporting.
Accurate developed length reduces scrap, rework, and brake time. A small bend error compounds across multiple bends, shifting hole locations and causing fit-up problems on frames, ducts, and equipment guards.
The neutral axis is where material neither stretches nor compresses during bending. K-factor estimates its position as a fraction of thickness from the inside surface. Typical values often fall between 0.30 and 0.50, depending on material, tooling, and bend method.
Thickness (T) and inside radius (R) drive setback, allowance, and deduction. As a practical rule, many shops target R close to 1×T for mild steel air bends, while softer materials may use larger radii to avoid cracking and surface marking.
This calculator uses degrees converted to radians for the curved length contribution. For tight production, record the actual achieved angle from first-article inspection. Even a 1° deviation can shift the developed length by measurable fractions across several bends.
Drawings may specify flange lengths as outside (overall) or inside (clear opening). Outside dimensioning typically uses total bend deduction (BD) to remove overlap from intersections. Inside dimensioning typically uses total bend allowance (BA) to add the developed bend arc.
If your shop maintains a bend table, you can enter BA per bend or BD per bend to match proven tooling. This is useful when K-factor varies by punch/die set, material batch, grain direction, or when coating thickness affects forming behavior.
For parts with 2–6 bends, capture bend order, angle, R, and measured leg lengths after forming. Track the method used, then compare predicted vs measured flat lengths. Over time, this builds a reliable database for faster quoting and better first-pass yield.
Confirm units, verify thickness with calipers, and match dimensioning style to the print before cutting. After the first part, measure overall and internal features, then adjust K-factor or bend table values. Save the final report for repeat work.
1) What is a good starting K-factor?
Many shops start around 0.40–0.45 for air bending mild steel, then tune using first-article measurements. Tooling geometry, material, and bend method can shift the best value noticeably.
2) Should I use outside or inside dimensioning?
Use the same style as your drawing. Outside matches overall flange lengths; inside matches clear openings. Mixing styles can double-count or miss bend effects, causing wrong developed length.
3) Why does bend deduction sometimes look negative?
With certain angles, radii, or entered allowances, the calculated overlap can be small or reversed. Negative BD is a signal to verify inputs, tooling assumptions, and whether you should use a bend table instead.
4) Can I use this for stainless or aluminum?
Yes, but expect different K-factors and radius choices. Softer alloys may need larger radii; harder alloys may spring back more. Calibrate with a test bend and update your preferred settings.
5) What if I already have bend allowances from the shop?
Choose “Enter bend allowance per bend” and input BA for each bend. The calculator will still compute setback and report the resulting bend deduction for documentation.
6) How many bends can I calculate?
This calculator supports 1 to 6 bends per part, which covers many brackets, channels, and transitions. For more bends, run the part in segments or expand the form fields in code.
7) Does this replace a press brake bend table?
It complements it. Use the K-factor method for estimates and early planning, then rely on validated bend tables for production. The best process is to compare both and keep the settings consistent.
Measure carefully, verify allowances, and cut with confidence always.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.