Wire Rope Tension Calculator

Wire Rope Tension Calculator

Estimate tension in a suspended wire rope from load, span, sag, rope angle, load-carrying parts, dynamic factor, friction or sheave loss, rope size, and safety factor.

Real wire rope tension presets

Pick a common suspended-load setup, then replace the load, span, sag, angle, and rope data with your measured field values.

📐Calculator inputs

Use the actual suspended weight before adding dynamic or safety factors.
Measure support to support along the horizontal line.
Sag controls the rope angle when using sag/span mode.
Used directly when the angle mode is selected.
Sag mode uses atan(sag divided by half span).
Count only rope parts that actually share the suspended load.
This multiplies the suspended load before tension is solved.
Loss increases required rope tension by reducing system efficiency.
Used to estimate required minimum breaking strength.
Used for estimated MBS and tension utilization.
The strength estimate is only a planning approximation.
Damaged rope should be removed from service, not derated into use.

Wire rope tension result

Peak rope tension 0 lb per loaded part
Horizontal component 0 lb at each support
Rope angle from sag and span
Required MBS 0 lb minimum breaking strength
Estimated rope MBS 0 lb before condition factor
Utilization 0% of condition-adjusted planning capacity
Enter values and calculate.

Calculation breakdown

🔗Rope, tension, and spec grid

T = W / 2sinθ single central load
For a balanced span, small angles create large rope tension.
Sag sets θ span geometry
Angle is atan(sag divided by half the span).
Loss adds pull friction and sheaves
The calculator divides by efficiency after dynamic load.
MBS = T x SF minimum strength
Use tagged WLL and certified rope data before estimates.

📊Angle and sag reference

Rope angle from horizontalApprox sag as span percentTension multiplier per sidePlanning meaning
4.4% of span5.74 x load per side shareVery high tension, usually poor geometry
10°8.8% of span2.88 x load per side shareHigh tension, review anchors and rope rating
15°13.4% of span1.93 x load per side shareModerate but still anchor-heavy
20°18.2% of span1.46 x load per side shareCommon planning range for non-rigid spans
30°28.9% of span1.00 x load per side shareLower tension, more vertical clearance needed

Dynamic factor reference

Dynamic factorTypical conditionCalculator effectUse note
1.00Static hanging load onlyNo extra load addedUse only when movement is controlled and known
1.10Smooth handling or light adjustmentAdds 10% to suspended loadGood for careful positioning checks
1.25Normal planning allowanceAdds 25% to suspended loadDefault for common field uncertainty
1.50Start, stop, wind, bounce, or swayAdds 50% to suspended loadUse when motion or weather can load the rope
2.00Severe shock planningDoubles suspended loadDoes not make shock loading acceptable for lifts

🔀Friction and sheave loss reference

Loss enteredEfficiency usedCommon sourcePlanning note
0% to 3%97% to 100%Direct straight rope, no moving sheaveBest case; still check end fittings and anchors
4% to 8%92% to 96%Good sheave, fair alignmentCommon allowance for simple reeving
9% to 15%85% to 91%Multiple sheaves or moderate frictionInspect sheaves, fleet angle, and bearing condition
16% to 25%75% to 84%Tight bends, poor alignment, dirty bearingsHigh loss and high wear; review the layout
Over 25%Under 75%Severe friction or poor geometryDo not treat the estimate as a usable design rating

🛡Wire rope strength and safety reference

Rope or factorTypical planning valueCalculator useImportant limit
7x19 galvanized cableFlexible, lower MBS estimateUseful for light control and support checksUse certified cable rating for final decisions
6x19 or 6x36 IWRCGeneral wire rope strength classDefault construction for tension planningFinished assemblies may rate lower than rope
19x7 rotation-resistant ropeHoist-specific constructionModerate MBS estimate with handling cautionNeeds correct end terminations and reeving
5:1 safety factorCommon wire rope sling design factorDefault required MBS multiplierCodes, equipment manuals, and lift plans may require more
Damaged or uncertified ropeNo usable planning capacityCondition factor can be set to zeroRemove from service instead of calculating around damage

💡Wire rope tension tips

Tip 1: Increase sag before increasing rope size whenever the layout allows it. A shallow span can multiply the suspended load into several times more rope tension and anchor load.
Tip 2: Treat the highest tension side as the controlling value when sheaves, reeving, or friction are present. The lead line can see more load than the ideal balanced geometry suggests.
Safety note: This calculator is a planning aid only, not an engineered lift plan, manufacturer rating, or authorization to suspend a load. Never exceed the wire rope tag, sling tag, hardware WLL, anchor rating, crane chart, hoist manual, or applicable code. Remove kinked, crushed, birdcaged, corroded, heat-damaged, shock-loaded, or uncertified rope from service and have critical, overhead, life-safety, or lifting applications reviewed by a qualified person.

Wire rope tension is an important factor to consider in many projects due to the fact that the tension of the wire rope determines the force that will travels through the rope. Many project use wire rope, such as in the create of stage banners, service drops for utility companies, temporary gantries, and guy lines for the masts of various structures. The tension of the wire rope can be determined by the relationship between the downward load that is placed upon the rope and the sideways pull upon the rope.

The angle between the load and the rope will determine the tension of the wire rope, as small changes in the angle can create great changes in the tension of that rope. If the angle between the load and the rope is very small, then the tension that is placed upon the wire rope will be very highly. The calculator allows for the determination of the tension of the wire rope by entering the load that the wire rope must support, the span of the wire rope, and the sag of the wire rope.

How to Calculate Wire Rope Tension

In addition to these factor, additional factors must also be included in the calculation. The dynamic allowance account for the effect of both wind upon the wire rope as well as the starting and stopping of the load that the wire rope is to be transported by. Friction loss

Wire Rope Tension Calculator

Author

  • Thomas Martinez

    Hi, I am Thomas Martinez, the owner of ToolCroze.com! As a passionate DIY enthusiast and a firm believer in the power of quality tools, I created this platform to share my knowledge and experiences with fellow craftsmen and handywomen alike.

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