Log Weight Calculator

Log Weight Calculator estimates log weight with weight = volume × density using length, end diameters, quantity, species density, and units for hauling, lifting, and site load plans.

Tree Species (Density)
Custom Specific Density
Estimated Total Log Weight
4,703.33 lb
Total calculated mass based on specified volume and density.
Calculated Volume
107.63 cu ft Total
Per Piece Volume 10.76 cu ft
Metric Vol. Equivalent 3.05 m³
Total true solid wood volume computed from exact cylindrical geometry.
Lumber Yield Estimates
400 BF (Doyle)
Scribner Decimal C 536 BF
Weight per Log Foot 47.03 lb/ft
Standard forestry scales estimating the board feet of usable lumber that can be milled.
3,000 lb Trailer Loads
1.57 Loads
1,000 lb Pickup Loads 4.70 Loads
45,000 lb Flatbed Loads 0.10 Loads
Estimated number of standard vehicles required to transport this load safely.
Weight & Density Equivalents
2,133.39 Kilograms
Metric Tonnes 2.13 t
Weight per Solid Cu Ft 43.70 lb/cu ft
Quick conversion to standard metric weights and volumes for international planning.
Calculations Complete
Values provided are theoretical averages. Actual wood weights will vary based on regional growth conditions, exact moisture content, and bark thickness. Ensure lifting equipment exceeds these estimates.

Estimating the weight of round timber before it reaches the mill or the truck is a core task in logging and construction. A log weight calculator uses species density and log dimensions to provide a reliable mass estimate, helping crews plan lifting equipment, trucking, and on-site handling.

How a Log Weight Calculator Determines Total Load

Two approaches cover nearly every jobsite scenario: single logs measured individually, or stacked wood measured as a bulk cord or pile. For a single log, the calculator computes solid volume from the log’s geometry.

For a stack, the gross volume is reduced by a packing factor that accounts for air gaps between round pieces. Either way, the final weight is simply the solid wood volume multiplied by the density of the chosen species.

The underlying math remains straightforward, but choosing the correct volume formula and density value determines whether the estimate holds up under real conditions.

Log Volume Estimation: Tapered and Cylindrical Forms

Most logs taper— the butt end is larger than the top end. Treating them as perfect cylinders overestimates volume. The truncated cone formula corrects for that shape.

Tapered Log Formula

Volume of a single tapered log:

V = (π × L / 12) × (ds² + ds × dl + dl²)

where

  • V is solid volume
  • L is log length
  • ds is the diameter at the small end
  • dl is the diameter at the large end

All dimensions must be in the same linear unit (feet, inches, or meters). The formula produces volume in the cubic unit of that length— cubic feet if lengths are in feet, or cubic meters if in meters.

Fully Worked Example, Imperial

Consider a red oak log 12 feet long with a small-end diameter of 10 inches and a large-end diameter of 14 inches. Convert diameters to feet:

  • ds = 10 in ÷ 12 = 0.8333 ft
  • dl = 14 in ÷ 12 = 1.1667 ft

Compute the squares and product:

  • ds² = 0.8333² = 0.6944
  • dl² = 1.1667² = 1.3611
  • ds × dl = 0.8333 × 1.1667 = 0.9722

Sum those three numbers: 0.6944 + 1.3611 + 0.9722 = 3.0278

Now multiply by (π × L ÷ 12). With L = 12 ft, that multiplier is (3.1416 × 12) ÷ 12 = 3.1416.

Single-log volume = 3.1416 × 3.0278 = 9.51 cubic feet.

A load of 8 such logs gives a solid volume of 8 × 9.51 = 76.1 cubic feet.

Metric Example, Tapered

Take a log 3.6 m long, ds = 25 cm (0.25 m), dl = 35 cm (0.35 m).

  • ds² = 0.0625, dl² = 0.1225, ds × dl = 0.0875
  • Sum = 0.2725
  • π × L ÷ 12 = 3.1416 × 3.6 ÷ 12 = 0.9425

Single volume = 0.9425 × 0.2725 = 0.257 cubic meters.

Cylindrical Approximation

When the log is nearly straight or only the mid‑section diameter is available, use the cylinder formula:

V = (π × dm² / 4) × L

where dm is the diameter measured at the midpoint. This method assumes constant cross‑section and is suitable for veneer logs or machine‑rounded poles. In practice, it can overestimate volume by 5–10% compared with the truncated cone method on naturally tapered timber.

Stack Volume and the Packing Factor

Firewood, pulpwood, and short logs are often bought and sold by the stacked cord or cubic measure. A stack’s gross volume is its rectangular envelope— width × height × length.

Because round pieces leave voids, the actual wood volume is less. The standard packing factor for random‑length roundwood stacked by hand is 0.70, meaning 70% solid wood and 30% air space.

Example: One Cord

A standard cord measures 4 ft high × 4 ft wide × 8 ft long, giving a gross volume of 128 cubic feet. Applying a 0.70 packing factor:

Solid wood volume = 128 × 0.70 = 89.6 cubic feet.

For Douglas‑fir with a dry density of about 32 lb/ft³, the stack’s total dry weight approximates 89.6 × 32 = 2,867 lb, or roughly 1.4 short tons.

Packing factor varies with log straightness, diameter, and stacking care. Tightly stacked, debarked, uniform bolts can approach 0.75–0.80. Crooked, branched, or split‑heavy piles may drop to 0.60–0.65. When no local measurement is available, 0.70 remains a defensible jobsite default.

Wood Density and Species Reference

Weight rises directly with density. Dry‑wood densities for species common in heavy timber and logging appear below. These are typical values for heartwood at 12% moisture content, consistent with the data embedded in standard lookup tables.

SpeciesDry density (lb/ft³)Dry density (kg/m³)
Western red cedar23.1370
Ponderosa pine28.1450
Douglas‑fir31.8510
Southern yellow pine36.2–41.2580–660
Red oak43.7700
White oak46.8750
Hickory (shagbark)49.9800
Live oak61.2980

A red oak log at 43.7 lb/ft³ weighs nearly twice as much as a western red cedar log of identical dimensions. Density is the single largest source of variation between estimates, and selecting the wrong species can throw a load plan off by hundreds of pounds.

Moisture content adds significant mass. Green wood can weigh 30–50% more than dry wood. Bark, when included, contributes an extra 10–15% by volume and weight depending on species and thickness.

Field estimates should treat the calculator’s result as a dry‑wood baseline. Apply a green‑weight multiplier if the logs are fresh, or add a safety margin when lifting and hauling.

Weight Calculation and Unit Conversions

Once the solid volume and density are known, weight follows simply:

Weight = Volume × Density

If volume is in cubic feet and density in pounds per cubic foot, weight comes out in pounds. To convert to other units commonly used in trucking and crane charts:

  • Pounds to short tons: divide by 2,000
  • Pounds to metric tonnes: multiply by 0.0004536 or divide by 2,204.6
  • Cubic feet to cubic meters: multiply by 0.02832
  • Kilograms to pounds: multiply by 2.205

Worked Weight Example

Using the 12‑ft red oak log with 9.51 ft³ of solid volume and a dry density of 43.7 lb/ft³:

Single log weight = 9.51 × 43.7 = 415.6 lb.

Eight logs: 8 × 415.6 = 3,325 lb, or 1.66 short tons. In metric, that is about 1,508 kg, or 1.51 metric tonnes.

A crane rated for 2,000 lb would be inadequate for the eight‑log lift. The estimate drives equipment selection and lifting‑lug sizing.

Practical Considerations for Jobsite Load Planning

Bark, moisture, and internal decay can all shift the final weight away from the calculated value. A log that looks sound may have hidden rot or hollow pockets, especially in older windfalls.

Weighing a representative sample on a portable scale gives the best reality check. When that isn’t possible, experienced operators add a 10–20% contingency to the calculated weight before selecting slings, chains, or a crane configuration.

Truck payload limits often constrain the number of logs per load before the bed fills up. A typical tri‑axle log truck can legally carry 80,000 lb gross vehicle weight in many jurisdictions, with the truck and trailer tare subtracting about 35,000 lb, leaving roughly 45,000 lb of payload.

If each green Douglas‑fir log weighs around 2,500 lb, the truck can haul about 18 logs per trip. Species and moisture differences can swing that number by five or more pieces— enough to trigger an overweight ticket or a second run.

On the purchase side, timber is sometimes sold by the ton rather than by board feet or cords. The calculation then runs in reverse: a buyer verifies the delivered weight against the estimated solid‑wood weight to confirm the species mix and rule out excessive moisture. Understanding the relationship between volume, density, and weight protects both buyer and seller from mis‑scaled transactions.

Accurate log weight estimates begin with careful diameter and length measurements and a species identification backed by a reputable density reference.

While field conditions rarely match textbook values, a methodical calculation anchored to the truncated‑cone or packing‑factor approach gives a number that can be trusted for planning— and then verified and adjusted as the first loads hit the scale.