Tungsten carbide density, weight per cubic inch, and calculator inputs
A practical planning range for cemented tungsten carbide is about 13.5 to 15.2 g/cm3, or about 0.488 to 0.549 lb/in3. For quick RFQ planning, one cubic inch at a common 14.5 g/cm3 grade weighs about 0.524 lb, or 8.38 oz. Use the exact Extramet grade density whenever the quote depends on material yield, shipping weight, balance, or finished part weight.
| Planning question | Answer | Use in the calculator |
|---|---|---|
| Typical density range | 13.5 to 15.2 g/cm3 | Select the closest grade density for early estimating. |
| Common shop estimate | 14.5 g/cm3 | Use when the final grade is not yet selected. |
| Pounds per cubic inch | 0.488 to 0.549 lb/in3 | Multiply part volume by lb/in3 for fast weight estimates. |
| Weight per cubic inch at 14.5 g/cm3 | 0.524 lb/in3 | One 1.000 in3 blank weighs about 0.524 lb. |
Need a quote instead of an estimate? Send the drawing, grade, finished dimensions, grind allowance, tolerance, and quantity through the RFQ form.
Calculate part weight using tungsten carbide density and your part dimensions. Choose a shape, enter measurements,
select units, and get an instant weight estimate. Results are directional and intended for quoting and planning.
Tungsten Carbide Density and Weight Calculator
Tungsten Carbide Density and Weight Calculator
Tungsten carbide is deceptively heavy. With a density nearly double that of steel and roughly 50% higher than lead, underestimating the weight of a carbide component can lead to costly errors in shipping logistics, pricing estimations, and handling equipment.
This Density and Weight Calculator allows you to instantly determine the mass of rods, bars, and blanks before you order. By inputting your dimensions and grade specifications, you gain immediate insight into the material weight, which is often the primary driver of cost.
Why it matters: Small boxes of carbide can exceed safe lifting limits. Accurate weight calculations ensure your team is prepared with the right lifting gear and that your freight quotes match reality.
Use this tool to plan your inventory, estimate shipping costs, and verify that your designs meet weight constraints for high-speed rotating applications.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much heavier is carbide than steel?
Does the grade affect the weight?
Why is calculating weight important for quoting?
What is the formula for calculating weight?
(π × r² × Length) × Density.
Our calculator handles the conversion factors automatically, ensuring you get an accurate weight whether you are inputting metric (mm) or imperial (inch) measurements.
Quick answers for tungsten and tungsten carbide weight
How heavy is tungsten per cubic inch?
Pure tungsten is about 19.3 g/cm3, or about 0.697 lb/in3. Cemented tungsten carbide is usually lighter than pure tungsten because it includes binder and grade-specific formulation changes.
What is the density of tungsten carbide?
A practical planning range for cemented tungsten carbide is about 13.5 to 15.2 g/cm3. Use the actual grade density for quote, freight, balance, or material-yield decisions.
How much does tungsten carbide weigh?
At a common planning density of 14.5 g/cm3, tungsten carbide weighs about 0.524 lb/in3. Multiply volume by grade density, then confirm finished versus oversize dimensions before quoting.
Useful next steps: route material requests through the product hub, compare the grade chart, review blank stock options, or prepare drawings for pin RFQ details and punch RFQ details.
Carbide rod, blank, and punch weight examples
Use the calculator for rods, rectangular blanks, discs, carbide punches, pins, and custom forms. Diameter matters heavily on round parts because cylinder volume uses radius squared. For rectangular blanks, use the oversize stock dimensions when you are planning material yield and the finished dimensions when you need delivered part weight.
Volume = pi x radius squared x length. Weight = volume x grade density.
Volume = length x width x thickness. Add grinding stock before estimating material cost.
Include grade, finish, tolerance, edge/radius notes, quantity, and required inspection details.
Example weights at 14.5 g/cm3
| Part geometry | Approx. volume | Approx. weight | Next step |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.500 in diameter x 6.000 in rod | 1.178 in3 | 0.62 lb | Review blanks |
| 1.000 in diameter x 6.000 in rod | 4.712 in3 | 2.47 lb | Plan grinding |
| 2.000 x 1.000 x 0.500 in blank | 1.000 in3 | 0.52 lb | Send RFQ details |
For grade selection, compare Extramet grade options. For rotary-tool work, compare the request with cutting tool blanks. For finished part requirements, route dimensions through machining and grinding review, then send the drawing through the RFQ form.
Citation-ready carbide density references
For buyers, engineers, and editors who need a shareable reference, Extramet also maintains a tungsten carbide density and weight RFQ reference, a one-page PDF summary, and visual cheat sheets for density, diameter, and RFQ planning.
Use the calculator for estimates, then confirm grade density, finished dimensions, oversize stock dimensions, quantity, tolerance, and finish through the RFQ form.
Keep the estimate tied to the part you will actually order
Weight changes when the grade, diameter, length, or stock allowance changes. For early planning, a reasonable density range is enough. For quoting, use the grade and the dimensions that match the material being ordered, not just the final part envelope.
If the calculation is for a blank or rod, compare the inputs with the carbide blanks page. If the number will affect freight or handling, include both finished dimensions and any oversize stock dimensions on the RFQ.
Connect the density estimate to the part you will quote
Density and weight estimates are useful when they lead to a better RFQ. If the estimate affects cost, shipping, yield, or handling, include the grade basis, drawing dimensions, oversize stock allowance, finished dimensions, and quantity. That lets Extramet connect the calculator result to the material and manufacturing path.
When the grade is unknown, use a planning density only as a starting point. Final quote review should use the selected grade and the geometry that will actually be supplied.