Weld Connection
Structural engineers in Australia designing fillet weld and butt weld connections under the current AS 4100:2020. Resolves combined shear and tension forces into weld demand per unit length and checks against the design capacity with the appropriate reduction factors.
14-day free trial - no credit card required
What it calculates
Analyse and design fillet weld and butt weld connections to AS 4100:2020. Resolves combined shear and tension into force per unit length of weld and checks against the design capacity with weld quality and reduction factors per Cl 9.6.
Code standards
- AS 4100:2020
How it calculates
The Weld Connection (AS 4100:2020) calculator checks fillet and butt weld connections against Clause 9.6 of AS 4100:2020. The calculator resolves total applied shear and tension forces into force per unit length of weld and compares the resultant demand against the design capacity.
Force per unit length
Total applied forces are distributed over the effective weld length l_w:
- Shear force per unit length: tau_w = V_w / l_w
- Tension force per unit length: sigma_w = N_w / l_w
The resultant design force per unit length of weld:
v*_w = sqrt(tau_w^2 + sigma_w^2)
This vector combination accounts for the simultaneous action of shear and tension (or compression) at the weld throat.
Weld capacity (Clause 9.6)
The nominal capacity per unit length v_w depends on the weld type:
Fillet weld (SP quality): v_w = 0.6 × f_uw × t_t × k_r
RHS fillet weld: v_w = 0.6 × f_uw × t_t × k_r (with a modified capacity factor)
Butt weld: v_w = f_ub × t_t
where:
- f_uw = nominal tensile strength of the weld metal (MPa)
- f_ub = nominal tensile strength of the base metal (MPa)
- t_t = design throat thickness (mm)
- k_r = reduction factor for lap connection length
Reduction factor for lap connections (k_r)
For lap connections, the reduction factor k_r accounts for non-uniform force distribution along long welds:
- l_w ≤ 1700 mm: k_r = 1.10 - 0.06 × (l_w / 1000)
- 1700 mm < l_w ≤ 8000 mm: linear interpolation
- l_w > 8000 mm: k_r = 0.62
For connections other than lap connections: k_r = 1.0
Capacity factor (phi)
The capacity factor phi depends on the weld type and quality category per AS 4100:2020:
- SP fillet weld: phi = 0.8
- SP butt weld: phi = 0.9
- GP weld category: phi = 0.7
The design capacity: v_d = phi × v_w
Utilization check
Utilization = v*_w / v_d ≤ 1.0
If the utilization ratio exceeds 1.0, the weld is overstressed. Adjustments can be made by increasing the throat thickness, increasing the weld length, or reducing the applied loading.
Scope and limitations
This calculator checks a single weld cross-section under uniform force per unit length. For weld groups carrying bending moment or torsion (such as in eccentric connections), the peak demand at the most stressed point in the group should be determined first and entered as the governing input forces. Minimum weld sizes and end return requirements per AS 4100:2020 Clause 9.7 must be verified separately.
Related calculators
Frequently asked questions
What design code does this calculator use?
What are the key inputs?
What does the calculator check and output?
Can it handle fillet welds under combined shear and bending?
What weld electrode classifications are supported?
Access this calculator and 100+ more
All verified, standards-aligned. Start a free trial - no credit card required.