Universal Welding Formula

Deposition Rate Calculator

Free online tool — calculate weld metal deposition rate in lbs/hr and kg/hr from wire feed speed and electrode diameter.

Industry-standard deposition rate formulas by welding process.

Understanding Deposition Rate

Deposition rate measures how much weld metal you deposit per hour of arc-on time, expressed in pounds per hour (lbs/hr) or kilograms per hour (kg/hr). It is the single most important productivity metric in production welding because it directly determines how fast you can fill a joint and move to the next one. Higher deposition rates mean fewer labor hours per weldment, lower cost per foot of weld, and faster project completion.

The formula is straightforward: DR = WFS x (pi/4 x d^2) x density x 60, where WFS is wire feed speed, d is electrode diameter, and density is the wire material density (0.283 lb/in^3 for carbon steel). This calculator handles the math — you just need two inputs. Enter your wire feed speed in inches per minute (in/min) or meters per minute (m/min) using the unit toggle. Then select your electrode diameter from the dropdown — common sizes range from 0.023" for thin-gauge sheet metal work up to 1/16" for heavy structural applications. Choose GMAW or FCAW as your welding process. FCAW results include an 85% deposition efficiency factor to account for flux core material that does not become weld metal. Click Calculate to see your result in both imperial and metric units.

"Deposition rate is the single biggest driver of productivity in high-volume fabrication — a 20% improvement in deposition rate translates directly to 20% more linear feet of weld per shift."

— Widely cited in welding productivity literature, reflecting fabrication economics and arc-on time principles

What Your Deposition Rate Means

Deposition rate tells you how many pounds (or kilograms) of weld metal you deposit per hour of arc-on time. It is driven by three variables: wire feed speed, electrode diameter, and wire density. A higher deposition rate means more metal laid down per hour, which directly affects project cost and schedule.

In practice, deposition rate determines how quickly you can fill a joint. Larger electrode diameters and faster wire feed speeds increase deposition but also increase heat input. For multi-pass welds on thick sections, balancing deposition rate against heat input and interpass temperature is essential to avoid overheating the base metal or exceeding WPS parameters.

Typical GMAW deposition rates for structural steel range from 3 to 12 lb/hr depending on wire diameter and WFS. FCAW generally achieves higher rates than solid-wire GMAW at the same amperage. SAW achieves the highest deposition rates of all arc welding processes, often exceeding 15 lb/hr, making it the preferred choice for long, straight seams in shop fabrication.

Deposition rate affects heat input, which is a supplementary essential variable in ASME Section IX when impact testing is required per the construction code.

"Deposition rate is the fundamental productivity metric in arc welding. For a given joint volume, doubling the deposition rate halves the arc-on time — and arc-on time is the single largest cost driver in manual and semi-automatic welding."

— Standard welding engineering principle per AWS Welding Handbook, 10th Ed., Vol. 1, Ch. 12

FAQ

How do you calculate deposition rate?
Deposition rate (DR) equals wire feed speed multiplied by the cross-sectional area of the electrode multiplied by wire density multiplied by 60. The full formula is DR = WFS x (pi/4 x d^2) x density x 60, where WFS is wire feed speed in inches per minute, d is electrode diameter in inches, and density is 0.283 lb/in^3 for carbon steel. The result is in pounds per hour (lbs/hr). To convert to kg/hr, multiply by 0.4536. This formula gives theoretical deposition rate assuming 100% arc efficiency. Actual deposition is reduced by spatter loss, stub-end waste, and arc-off time. GMAW solid wire typically achieves 95-98% deposition efficiency, while FCAW achieves approximately 85% because the flux core does not contribute to deposited weld metal. For production planning, multiply the calculated rate by your expected duty cycle to estimate actual output per shift.
What affects deposition rate in welding?
Three primary variables drive deposition rate: wire feed speed, electrode diameter, and wire density. Wire feed speed has the most direct impact — doubling WFS doubles the deposition rate. Electrode diameter affects the cross-sectional area of wire being fed, and since area scales with the square of diameter, moving from 0.035" to 0.045" wire increases deposition by approximately 65%. Wire density is fixed for a given alloy (0.283 lb/in^3 for carbon steel, 0.289 lb/in^3 for stainless steel). Beyond these formula variables, welding process matters: FCAW and SAW generally achieve higher deposition rates than GMAW at equivalent parameters because they can run at higher current densities. Shielding gas composition, contact-tip-to-work distance, and electrode extension also influence arc behavior and effective deposition. In production, duty cycle — the percentage of time the arc is actually on — determines how much of the theoretical rate translates to actual output.
What is a good deposition rate for GMAW vs FCAW?
For GMAW with solid wire on structural steel, typical deposition rates range from 3 to 12 lbs/hr depending on wire diameter and wire feed speed. A common production setup using 0.045" ER70S-6 wire at 300 in/min produces approximately 8 lbs/hr. FCAW generally achieves higher deposition rates than GMAW at equivalent amperages — typical rates run from 5 to 14 lbs/hr with 0.045" flux-cored wire. The higher deposition with FCAW comes from the ability to run at higher current densities and travel speeds while maintaining good bead profile. However, FCAW deposition efficiency is lower (approximately 85% vs 95-98% for GMAW) because the flux core does not become weld metal. SAW achieves the highest deposition rates of all common arc processes, often exceeding 15 lbs/hr, making it the preferred choice for long, straight seams in shop fabrication where the joint geometry permits.
Does wire diameter affect deposition rate?
Yes, wire diameter has a significant effect on deposition rate because the formula depends on the cross-sectional area of the electrode, which scales with the square of the diameter. Moving from 0.035" wire to 0.045" wire increases the cross-sectional area by approximately 65%, meaning the same wire feed speed deposits 65% more metal per hour. Common electrode diameters for GMAW range from 0.023" for thin sheet metal to 0.0625" (1/16") for heavy structural work. Larger wire requires higher amperage to maintain a stable arc, so the machine must be capable of delivering sufficient current. In practice, fabricators choose wire diameter based on joint geometry, material thickness, and position — smaller diameters for out-of-position and thin material, larger diameters for flat-position production welding on thick plate where maximum deposition rate is the priority.
How do you convert deposition rate from lbs/hr to kg/hr?
To convert deposition rate from pounds per hour to kilograms per hour, multiply by 0.4536. For example, a deposition rate of 8.00 lbs/hr equals 3.63 kg/hr. To convert in the other direction — kg/hr to lbs/hr — multiply by 2.2046. This calculator displays both units automatically after each calculation. When working with metric wire feed speeds in meters per minute instead of inches per minute, the calculator converts internally using the factor 1 m = 39.3701 inches before applying the deposition rate formula. The underlying formula and physics are identical regardless of unit system — only the input and output units change. For international projects where specifications reference metric units, reporting deposition rate in kg/hr is standard practice. Many WPS forms include a field for deposition rate, and the unit should match the project specification requirements.

Industry-standard formulas