Calculate required fillet and groove weld length for structural connections. Supports AISC/AWS load calculations, weld sizing, and electrode selection.
Properly sizing structural welds is critical for safety and code compliance. The Weld Length Calculator determines the required weld length for fillet and groove welds based on applied loads, weld size, and electrode strength — following AISC and AWS design standards. Under-sized welds risk catastrophic failure; over-sized welds waste time, material, and can cause distortion.
Fillet welds are the most common structural weld type, used for lap joints, T-joints, and corner joints. The effective throat of a fillet weld (0.707 × leg size) determines its load capacity. A 1/4-inch fillet weld with E70 electrode can carry about 4.6 kips per linear inch. Knowing this, you can calculate exactly how much weld length is needed for any applied load.
This calculator handles both fillet and groove welds, supports common electrode types (E60, E70, E80), calculates required weld size or length, and checks against AISC minimum/maximum weld size requirements. It also estimates weld volume for material takeoff and cost estimation.
Structural weld sizing requires code-compliant calculations. This calculator provides instant results following AISC/AWS standards, preventing both unsafe under-sizing and expensive over-welding. Use it to size connection welds, compare ASD and LRFD checks, and estimate weld length from the applied load. It is especially useful during quick connection design iterations and sketch-level detailing.
Fillet: Throat = 0.707 × Leg Size. Capacity/inch = 0.707 × w × 0.6 × FEXX. Required Length = Force / Capacity per inch. Groove (CJP): Capacity = Effective Area × 0.6 × FEXX. Minimum fillet size per AISC Table J2.4.
Result: Required length: 13.5 in (allowable capacity: 3.71 kips/in)
For a 50-kip load with 1/4-inch fillet weld using E70 electrode, the nominal capacity per inch is 0.707 × 0.25 × 0.6 × 70 = 7.42 kips/in. With ASD (Ω = 2.0), the allowable capacity is 3.71 kips/in, so the required length is 50/3.71 = 13.5 inches, plus returns. With LRFD (φ = 0.75), the design strength is 5.57 kips/in, which would require 9.0 inches.
Fillet welds resist loads through shear across the effective throat area. The critical section is at 45° through the throat, not along the leg. For eccentric loading (moment on a weld group), the instantaneous center of rotation method gives the most accurate capacity — treating each small length of weld as a spring with capacity proportional to deformation.
Longitudinal fillet welds (parallel to the load) have different ductility than transverse welds (perpendicular). AISC allows a directionality factor of 1.0 + 0.50·sin¹·⁵(θ) for fillet welds loaded at angle θ to the weld longitudinal axis. Transverse welds (θ=90°) are about 50% stronger per unit length than longitudinal welds.
Complete Joint Penetration (CJP) groove welds develop the full strength of the thinner plate — no separate calculations needed if the weld metal matches or exceeds the base metal strength. Partial Joint Penetration (PJP) groove welds have effective throat depths depending on groove angle and welding process, requiring explicit capacity calculations similar to fillet welds.
Common groove preparations include V-groove (60° included angle), bevel (45° on one plate), J-groove (for thick plates), and U-groove (double J, for very thick plates). The choice depends on plate thickness, access, joint configuration, and cost — more complex preparations reduce weld volume but increase plate preparation cost.
Weld volume increases dramatically with size: a 1/2-inch fillet has 4× the cross-section (and roughly 4× the cost) of a 1/4-inch fillet. This is why proper sizing matters economically. For cost estimation: fillet weld volume = 0.5 × leg² × length. E7018 electrode deposition rate is approximately 5-8 lb/hour for SMAW, 12-20 lb/hour for FCAW. Material cost plus labor at $80-120/hour makes oversized welds very expensive across a large project.
The number after "E" indicates the tensile strength in ksi. E70 (most common) has 70 ksi tensile strength and 0.6 × 70 = 42 ksi shear strength. E60 (42 ksi base metal) and E80 (for higher-strength steels) are also commonly used.
For equal-leg fillet welds, the effective throat is 0.707 × leg size. A 3/8-inch fillet has 0.265 inches effective throat. This is the shortest distance from the root to the face — the plane where shear failure occurs.
AISC Table J2.4: Base metal up to 1/4 inch → 1/8 inch minimum weld. Over 1/4 to 1/2 → 3/16 inch. Over 1/2 to 3/4 → 1/4 inch. Over 3/4 inch → 5/16 inch. Maximum size along edges ≤ 1/4 inch thick: full thickness. Over 1/4 inch: thickness minus 1/16 inch.
Fillet welds are simpler and cheaper — use them for most connections. Groove welds (especially CJP) are required for moment connections, butt joints in tension, and when fillet weld size would be excessive. CJP groove welds develop the full strength of the connected plate.
Intermittent fillet welds alternate between welded and unwelded segments (e.g., 2 inches welded, 4 inches gap). Minimum length per segment is 4× the weld size or 1.5 inches. They save material and reduce distortion but aren't permitted for dynamically loaded connections.
For E70 electrodes, each 1/16 inch of fillet weld leg provides about 1.39 kips/inch capacity (LRFD). So a 1/4-inch (4/16) fillet carries about 4 × 1.39 ≈ 5.57 kips/inch LRFD (4.64 kips/inch ASD). This is the most commonly used rule of thumb in steel design.