Weld Section Modulus Calculator

Design welds with clear geometry and units today. Instantly see Ix, Iy, Zx, Zy here. Download reports, share numbers, and validate calculations faster always.

Inputs

Outputs follow the same length unit.
For fillet welds: t = 0.707·w.
Choose a common weld layout.
Center-to-center spacing.

Optional loads (for quick stress checks)

Use consistent units: if lengths are mm, use N·mm; if inches, use lb·in.
Results appear above this form after you calculate.

Formula used

  • Effective throat: For a fillet weld, t = 0.707·w.
  • Throat area of a line weld: A = t·L (sum over all segments).
  • Second moment of a line segment: For a straight segment of length L centered on its own axis, the nonzero term is t·L³/12 about the perpendicular centroidal axis.
  • Parallel-axis shift: I = I_local + A·d² for each segment, summed across the weld group.
  • Section modulus: Zx = Ix/cy and Zy = Iy/cx, where c is the farthest distance to the weld layout.
  • Polar moment: J = Ix + Iy. A quick torsion estimate uses τ_max ≈ T·r_max/J.

How to use this calculator

  1. Select your unit system and weld size mode.
  2. Choose a weld group type that matches your layout.
  3. Enter the geometric dimensions for that layout.
  4. Optionally enter bending moments and torque for quick stresses.
  5. Press Calculate to view Ix, Iy, Zx, and Zy.
  6. Use the download buttons to save a record.

Example data table

Layout Inputs (mm) Fillet w (mm) Zx (mm³) Zy (mm³)
Rectangle perimeter b=120, h=80 6 49,772.8000 61,084.8000
Circular ring R=50 5 27,763.8251 27,763.8251
Double horizontal lines L=150, s=60 5 31,815.0000 26,512.5000
L-shape (two lines) Lx=120, Ly=80 6 7,918.4000 15,998.4000
Examples are for geometry comparison only.

Notes and limits

  • This tool models weld groups as thin throat lines.
  • For eccentric loads and complex patterns, use a full weld-group analysis method.
  • Always verify against your applicable design code and detailing requirements.

Weld section modulus in one minute

Weld section modulus describes how a weld group resists bending, similar to a beam section modulus. The calculator reports Zx and Zy for the weld layout about its centroid, using the weld-throat area as the resisting “section”.

Layouts covered by this tool

This calculator supports common weld groups used in brackets and frames: perimeter rectangle welds, two-line welds (parallel or transverse), and circular ring welds. Each layout is assumed symmetric and centered, so the centroid lies at mid‑width and mid‑height.

As a rule of thumb, common fabrication sizes include 3, 5, 6, and 8 mm fillets, while bracket weld rectangles often fall between 50–300 mm in width and 40–250 mm in height. The reported Z values typically land in the tens of thousands to a few hundred thousand mm³ for these ranges.

Fillet size and effective throat

For fillet welds, the effective throat is approximated by t = 0.707·w. For example, a 6 mm fillet gives t ≈ 4.24 mm. Because weld “area” scales with throat, increasing weld size increases Ix, Iy, and section modulus nearly proportionally.

How the calculator builds Ix and Iy

Weld groups are modeled as line elements with a throat area per unit length. For a rectangular perimeter, the total resisting area is roughly A = t·2(b+h). Moments of inertia are computed by integrating each weld line’s distance squared from the centroid.

From inertia to section modulus

Once Ix and Iy are known, section modulus follows Zx = Ix/cy and Zy = Iy/cx, where cx and cy are the farthest centroid distances to the weld pattern. Doubling the pattern height typically doubles Zx.

Bending checks using Z

For quick bending estimates, the tool can compute a nominal weld-group stress using σ ≈ M/Z. If a bracket sees M = 1.2 kN·m and Zx = 60,000 mm³, the nominal stress is about 20 MPa (after unit consistency).

Torsion and polar stiffness

For torsion, the calculator provides a simplified polar moment J ≈ Ix + Iy and a peak shear estimate τ_max ≈ T·r/J. This is a screening value; detailed eccentric-load weld analysis may require directional shear and vector summation.

Practical tips and common pitfalls

Use consistent units, and enter the actual weld pattern dimensions (centerline-to-centerline). Small changes in weld placement can change c distances and therefore Z. Always compare computed stresses to your governing code’s allowable weld strengths and safety factors.

FAQs

1) What is weld section modulus used for?

It converts a bending moment on a weld group into a nominal stress estimate using σ ≈ M/Z. It’s mainly a quick screening metric for comparing layouts or weld sizes.

2) Is throat or leg size more important?

Strength and stiffness track the effective throat area. If you enter leg size, the tool converts to throat using t = 0.707·w. Enter the value your drawings specify.

3) Why does Z change when I increase height more than width?

Zx is sensitive to vertical distance from the centroid. Increasing height increases those distances, boosting Ix and usually reducing the leverage ratio c less, so Zx rises faster.

4) Do these results include base metal thickness?

No. The properties are for the weld group only, modeled as a throat “line area”. Plate thickness affects overall joint behavior but is not part of weld section modulus.

5) What does the rectangle perimeter option assume?

It assumes continuous welds on all four sides of a centered rectangle with dimensions b and h, measured along the weld centerline. Intermittent welds should be reduced by their effective length ratio.

6) Can I use this for eccentric shear loads?

This tool gives a simplified torsion screening using J and τ ≈ T·r/J. For true eccentric shear, use a full weld-group vector method that combines direct and torsional shear.

7) Which units should I choose?

Choose the unit set that matches your drawings. If you mix units, stresses and moments will be wrong. For SI, use N·mm or kN·mm consistently; for US, use lbf·in or kip·in consistently.

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