Spot Weld Strength Calculator
Estimate resistance spot weld strength from nugget diameter, sheet material tensile strength, tensile-to-shear factor, weld count, edge distance, load angle, applied load, and safety factor.
Choose a common sheet-metal spot weld scenario. Each preset fills the inputs and runs the estimate.
| Sheet material | Typical tensile range | Planning shear factor | Spot weld note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low carbon steel | 38 to 55 ksi / 260 to 380 MPa | 0.55 | Common baseline for lap shear coupons and auto body flanges. |
| Galvanized steel | 40 to 60 ksi / 275 to 415 MPa | 0.52 | Coating can change current, heat balance, and nugget consistency. |
| HSLA steel | 60 to 90 ksi / 415 to 620 MPa | 0.50 | Higher strength sheets often need schedule validation and peel checks. |
| 300 series stainless | 75 to 95 ksi / 515 to 655 MPa | 0.52 | Higher electrical resistance can alter heat input and indentation. |
| Aluminum sheet | 25 to 45 ksi / 170 to 310 MPa | 0.42 | Needs larger nuggets and tighter schedule control than steel. |
| Nickel strip | 45 to 70 ksi / 310 to 480 MPa | 0.48 | Small welds are often governed by tab tearing or interfacial failure. |
| Check | Common planning target | Calculator treatment | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nugget diameter | About 4 sqrt(t) to 5 sqrt(t), metric t | Area = pi x D x D / 4 | Capacity rises with nugget area, so diameter errors matter quickly. |
| Edge distance | At least 2D for steel, 3D for aluminum | Reduction below material target | Short edge distance can cause tear-out instead of nugget shear. |
| Pitch distance | Often 3D to 6D, depending on sheet and schedule | Warning below 3D | Close pitch can reduce heat balance and load sharing reliability. |
| Sheet thickness | Use thinner sheet in unequal laps | Checks D/t ratio and nugget target | Thin sheet can tear before the fused nugget reaches full shear. |
| Load case | Angle input | Typical factor | Practical interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lap shear | 0 degrees | 1.00 | Best match for simple coupon shear capacity. |
| Shear with mild peel | 15 to 30 degrees | 0.94 to 0.82 | Common for offset flanges, brackets, and light eccentricity. |
| Mixed shear and tension | 45 degrees | About 0.70 | Use caution because peel can unzip a row of welds. |
| Peel or cross tension | 75 to 90 degrees | 0.46 to 0.40 | Often governed by sheet tearing, button pullout, or bending. |
| Pattern | Typical weld count | Useful spacing check | Design caution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single lap tab | 1 to 2 welds | Edge distance controls | Small tabs often peel instead of pure shear. |
| Flange seam | 4 to 30 welds | Pitch divided by nugget diameter | Load may not distribute evenly across every weld. |
| Bracket cluster | 3 to 12 welds | Check eccentric load path | Outer welds can see higher force from moment. |
| Patch plate | 8 to 60 welds | Rows, columns, and edge setback | Panel stiffness and local buckling may govern. |
Spot welds are typical the first location where a person look for the cause of the failure of a joint. Spot welds are an important component of many sheet metal assemblies, such as car doors or appliance cabinets, because the spot welds is the components that carry the mechanical load of the assembly. To determine the load capacity of a spot weld, a variety of different factor must be considered.
The strength of the metal that is use in the spot weld will impact the strength of that spot weld. Additionally, the fused area of the spot weld, the distance of the edge of the spot weld from the nearest edge of the sheet metal, and the angle of the load that is placed upon the spot weld will each impacts the strength of the spot weld. Each of these factors can be input into the calculator located on this page to determine the load that that spot weld is likely to be carried.
How to Check Spot Weld Strength
Many sheet metal designers begins their design process with a determination of the load that is to be placed upon the joint, as well as an estimate of the number of welds that will be able to be incorporated into the sheet metal assembly. The calculator will allow those designers to determine if the load that is to be placed upon the sheet metal joint will remain within the allowable limits of the spot welds, the number of welds that are needed to be formed along the sheet metal, and the diameter of the spot welds. Thus, this sheet metal spot weld load calculator can assist in the decision of whether it will be better to add more spot welds to the sheet metal than to increase the diameter of the spot welds that are to be utilize.
Sheet metal designers and fabricators can use the tables located on this sheet metal page to ensure that their estimates of spot weld strength are realistic. For instance, each table indicates the different factors that must be considered for different sheet metal. For example, mild steel will have a different shear factor then sheet metals with high levels of strength and low amounts of alloy elements; the mild steel sheets will tend to experience a “button” pullout failure mode, whereas the high strength, low alloy metals will fail in other regions of the weld (interfacial fracture, heat affected zone issues).
Additionally, aluminum metal alloys will require different factors than other metals; aluminum alloys require larger spot welds and more edge distance than other metals. If these factors are not incorporated into the sheet metal assembly, the aluminum sheet metal will fail by tearing prior to the spot weld failing at its theoretical shear strength. Joints that are fabricated within a sheet metal assembly are rarely construct in the same manner as the ideal lap shear coupon specimens from which the strength of spot welds is determined.
Factors such as the flexibility of a metal panel, the location of the spot welds relative to the panel thickness, the size of individual spot welds, and even how the sheet metal may buckle within the assembly will all impact the strength of each spot weld in the sheet metal. The process factor within the calculator is used to adjust for the differences between ideal and real-world conditions. This factor should of been lowered if the spot welds have poor access, if the sheet metals has different coating thicknesses, or if no destructive testing of sheet metal from the production line has been performed.
Thus, the results of this calculator are not a certification of the sheet metal assembly, but rather only a plan for the sheet metal designers to ensure that the sheet metal joint falls within an acceptable range. Edge distance between spot welds is a factor that is both easily and incorrectly calculate by sheet metal designers; it is also a factor that is costly to fix after the spot welds are fabricated. If the distance from the spot weld to the edge of the sheet metal is too short, the sheet metal will tear rather than shear at the spot weld.
The calculator can determine the load that each spot weld will carry if the edge distance is too short to allow for proper tearing of the sheet metal. The same factor apply to the distance between spot welds, if the spot welds are too close together, they will “rob” each other of heat during the welding process. This can lead to a perforation in the sheet metal joints.
One factor that is easily overlooked is the load angle. Most load data for metals references the condition in which the spot weld is subjected to a lap shear load. If the load placed upon the sheet metal joint includes a component of peel load, as is common with sheet metal designs, the spot weld strength will be reduced.
The reduction in strength that is reflected in the calculator is continuous with the load angle to ensure that the calculated strength is representative of the actual sheet metal loads. A forty-five degree load angle will exhibit a noticeable reduction in the strength of the spot weld. Additionally, forty-five degrees is often considered as the limit of a load angle for spot welds; for angles greater than forty-five degrees, the spot weld is considered to be dominated by peel loads, and the spot weld is sized according to that understanding of the spot weld load or mechanical fasteners are incorporated into the sheet metal structure to help support the sheet metal that is being join.
The safety factor that is entered into the calculator is another that reflects the engineering judgment of the sheet metal designer. For instance, most joints will have a safety factor of two unless additional factors require a higher safety factor. For instance, if the joint will be subjected to fatigue loading, if it will be exposed to a corrosive environment, or if it is required by regulations to have a higher safety factor for that sheet metal component, then a higher safety factor will be required.
Thus, the safety factor that is entered into the calculator will determine the strength of the spot weld joint by dividing the calculated joint strength by that entered factor. The calculator does not decide the appropriate safety factor for the sheet metal sheet joint. The strength of the spot welds can be calculated using the size of the spot welds as measured after the welding process; however, the size of the spot welds may not be representative of the strength of the spot welds that will be formed in the sheet metal production line.
The weld schedule that is used for each sheet metal component may drift from the parameters set for those spot welds. Thus, critical sheet metal joints will still require testing of actual sheet metal components prior to final assembly of the sheet metal structure. When determining the strength of the spot welds in sheet metal assemblies, it is recommended that the numbers is run with the measured spot welds, with the actual distance from the spot weld to the edge of the sheet metal components, and with the actual load angle that will be placed upon the sheet metal assembly.
Based upon these three factor, the designer can decide if additional spot welds will be needed, if the size of the spot welds should be increased, or if some other change should be made to the sheet metal assembly and design. Additionally, test coupons can be made from the sheet metal with the same spot weld schedule as will be applied to the sheet metal joints in the sheet metal assembly. Thus, not only can the spot weld load calculator assist in the sheet metal design process, the fabricated sheet metal components will also help to determine if the calculations that were made with the calculator were accurate.
