How to Calculate Metal Forging Weight
In metalworking, blacksmithing, and industrial manufacturing, calculating the required weight of a raw metal billet is an essential first step. The Forge Calculator computes the exact volume of your metal block based on its length, width, and thickness, and multiplies it by the material's specific density to find the net weight.
Note: Gross Weight incorporates a standard 5% multiplier to account for material lost to forge scaling, oxidation, and flash during the heating and hammering process.
Different metals have drastically different densities. For instance, a block of titanium will be nearly half the weight of a steel block of the exact same dimensions, while a block of brass will be slightly heavier than steel.
| Material | Density (lbs/in³) | Relative Weight Profile |
|---|---|---|
| Carbon / Alloy Steel | 0.283 | Standard Baseline |
| Stainless Steel | 0.289 | Slightly Heavier than Carbon |
| Aluminum | 0.098 | Extremely Light (~65% lighter than steel) |
| Titanium | 0.163 | Light & Strong (~40% lighter than steel) |
| Copper / Brass | 0.322 / 0.308 | Heavy |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is "Scale Loss" in forging?
When steel and other metals are heated to high forging temperatures in an oxygen-rich environment (like a gas or coal forge), the outer layer of the metal oxidizes and flakes off as "scale." This physically reduces the mass of the metal over time. The Forge Calculator adds a 5% buffer to your gross weight to ensure you start with enough material.
Why is Gross Weight important?
If you need a finished forged part to weigh exactly 10 pounds, you cannot start with a 10-pound billet. Due to scale loss, flash (excess metal squeezed out between dies), and final grinding/machining, you must start with a heavier block (Gross Weight) to yield the correct Net Weight.
Does this work for cylindrical/round stock?
This specific calculator is designed for rectangular billets and blocks. To calculate the volume of a round bar, the math requires determining the area of a circle (π × radius²) multiplied by the length, which uses a different volumetric formula.