--- title: "Teflon (PTFE) Weight Calculator" site: ProCalc.ai section: Construction url: https://procalc.ai/construction/teflon markdown_url: https://procalc.ai/construction/teflon.md date_published: 2026-02-16 date_modified: 2026-04-14 date_created: 2026-02-16 input_mode: focused --- # Teflon (PTFE) Weight Calculator **Site:** [ProCalc.ai](https://procalc.ai) — Free Professional Calculators **Section:** Construction **Calculator URL:** https://procalc.ai/construction/teflon **Markdown URL:** https://procalc.ai/construction/teflon.md **Published:** 2026-02-16 **Last Updated:** 2026-04-14 **Description:** Free Teflon (PTFE) Weight Calculator — calculate PTFE sheet, rod, tube weight by size. No sign-up needed. > *This file is served for AI systems and search crawlers. Human page: https://procalc.ai/construction/teflon* ## Overview The Teflon (PTFE) Weight Calculator on ProCalc.ai helps you estimate material weight fast when you’re working with PTFE/Teflon sheets, rods, or tubes and need numbers you can trust for engineering and procurement. You enter the shape, dimensions (length, width, thickness, or diameter), and quantity, and the Teflon (PTFE) Weight Calculator returns an accurate weight estimate based on PTFE density—ready to drop into a takeoff, BOM, or RFQ. You’ll see it used most by project engineers, estimators, and procurement teams who have to match material selections to load limits, shipping costs, and… ## Formula Weight (lb) = Density (lb/ft³) × Volume (ft³) This calculator estimates the weight of a Teflon (PTFE) part by first computing its geometric volume from the selected shape, then multiplying by an assumed material density. The logic is the standard construction-material approach: mass (or weight) scales linearly with volume when density is constant. For PTFE, the calculator uses a fixed density of 134 lb/ft³. Because most shop drawings and stock sizes are entered in inches (or in millimeters/centimeters in metric mode), the calculator computes volume in cubic inches first, converts to cubic feet, and then applies the density. Volume (ft³) = Volume (in³) ÷ 1728 The 1728 comes from 12 in/ft, so 1 ft³ = (12 in)³ = 1728 in³. Once weight in pounds is found, kilograms are obtained with the standard conversion. Weight (kg) = Weight (lb) × 0.453592 Inputs and variables: length, width, thickness, diameter, wall_thickness, and height are the part dimensions. In imperial mode, these are interpreted as inches. In metric mode, they are converted to inches internally before any volume math. Specifically, length, width, diameter, and height are converted from centimeters to inches using inches = cm ÷ 2.54, while thickness and wall_thickness are converted from millimeters to inches using inches = mm ÷ 25.4. This mixed conversion reflects common practice where metric sheet thickness is often specified in mm while overall dimensions may be entered in cm. Each shape has its own volume model. For a flat plate/sheet or a block/slab, the volume is a rectangular prism: V(in³) = length × width × thickness. For a round bar/rod (and the “solid cylinder” option), the volume is a cylinder: V(in³) = π × (diameter/2)² × length. For a square bar, V(in³) = width² × length (width is the side length). For a hollow tube/pipe, the volume is the outer cylinder minus the inner cylinder: V(in³) = π × [(D/2)² − (D/2 − t)²] × length, where D is outer diameter and t is wall thickness. If a nonstandard “rectangle” is used, the calculator falls back to V(in³) = length × width × (height or thickness). Worked example 1 (imperial, flat plate): Suppose a PTFE sheet is length = 24 in, width = 12 in, thickness = 0.50 in. First compute volume in cubic inches: V = 24 × 12 × 0.50 = 144 in³. Convert to ft³: V(ft³) = 144 ÷ 1728 = 0.083333… ft³. Apply density: Weight(lb) = 134 × 0.083333… = 11.1667 lb. Convert to kg: Weight(kg) = 11.1667 × 0.453592 = 5.065 kg (rounded). This shows the two-step method: geometry → ft³ → density. Worked example 2 (metric, hollow tube): Suppose outer diameter = 10 cm, wall thickness = 5 mm, length = 50 cm. Convert to inches: D = 10 ÷ 2.54 = 3.9370 in. Length = 50 ÷ 2.54 = 19.6850 in. Wall thickness t = 5 ÷ 25.4 = 0.19685 in. Outer radius Ro = D/2 = 1.9685 in. Inner radius Ri = Ro − t = 1.9685 − 0.19685 = 1.77165 in. Cross-sectional area difference = π(Ro² − Ri²) = π(1.9685² − 1.77165²) = π(3.8749 − 3.1387) = π(0.7362) = 2.313 in² (approx). Volume V(in³) = area × length = 2.313 × 19.685 = 45.53 in³. Convert: V(ft³) = 45.53 ÷ 1728 = 0.02635 ft³. Weight(lb) = 134 × 0.02635 = 3.531 lb. Weight(kg) = 3.531 × 0.453592 = 1.602 kg. Limitations and edge cases matter. The method assumes PTFE density is constant at 134 lb/ft³; actual PTFE density varies with grade, fillers (glass, bronze, carbon), porosity, and temperature, so real weights can differ. Dimensions must be positive; a wall thickness greater than or equal to the radius (t ≥ D/2) makes the inner radius zero or negative, which is not physically valid for a tube and will distort the subtraction term. Very thin parts can produce tiny volumes where rounding becomes noticeable. Finally, the calculator treats “length” as the extrusion/axial direction for rods, tubes, and cylinders; swapping length and diameter won’t change the math structure, but it will represent a different physical part. ## How to Use You’re ordering **PTFE** (Teflon) wear strips for a conveyor retrofit, and purchasing asks for total weight to estimate freight and confirm the support frame can handle the load. The supplier lists sizes (sheet thickness, rod diameter, tube wall), but not weight. That’s where a PTFE weight calculation helps: convert dimensions into volume, then multiply by density to get weight—fast enough for quoting, procurement, and basic structural checks. ## What Is Teflon (PTFE) Weight Calculator? A Teflon (PTFE) weight calculation estimates the mass of common stock shapes—sheet/plate, block/slab, round rod, square bar, solid cylinder, and hollow tube/pipe—based on dimensions and a standard material density. In construction and industrial fabrication, weight matters for shipping class, rigging plans, rack loading, and whether a component is practical to handle on site. Key idea: Weight comes from volume × density. For PTFE, a widely used nominal density is about 2.2 g/cm³ (typical range varies by grade and fillers). In imperial terms, that’s roughly 134 lb/ft³ (the density used in the calculation logic). For context, water is about 62.4 lb/ft³, so PTFE is a bit more than twice as dense as water. (Density and typical PTFE properties are commonly summarized in engineering references such as Britannica’s PTFE overview and standard polymer property tables.) PTFE is often specified under ASTM material standards (for example, ASTM D4894/D4895 for PTFE resins and molding/extrusion materials). If you’re working from a certified mill sheet, use the listed density when available—filled PTFE (glass, bronze, carbon) can be heavier than unfilled. ## The Formula (Step by Step) The calculation follows four steps: unit normalization → volume by shape → convert to ft³ → multiply by density. 1) Convert metric inputs to inches (if needed) Many shop drawings use mm and meters, but the internal math is done in inches, then converted to ft³. Conversions used: - Inches = centimeters ÷ 2.54 (for length/width/diameter/height if entered in cm-equivalent) - Inches = millimeters ÷ 25.4 (for thickness and wall thickness if entered in mm) 2) Compute volume in cubic inches (in³) by shape Use the appropriate geometry: - Plate/Sheet or Block/Slab (rectangular prism): Volume_in3 = length × width × thickness - Round Bar/Rod or Solid Cylinder: Volume_in3 = π × (diameter/2)² × length - Square Bar: Volume_in3 = width × width × length - Hollow Tube/Pipe: Volume_in3 = π × [ (OD/2)² − (ID/2)² ] × length where ID = OD − 2 × wall_thickness 3) Convert cubic inches to cubic feet Volume_ft3 = Volume_in3 ÷ 1728 (because 12 in × 12 in × 12 in = 1728 in³ per ft³) 4) Multiply by density to get weight Weight_lb = density_lb_ft3 × Volume_ft3 For PTFE here: density_lb_ft3 = 134 lb/ft³ Then convert to metric if needed: Weight_kg = Weight_lb × 0.453592 Written as formulas: - Volume_ft3 = Volume_in3 / 1728 - Weight_lb = 134 × Volume_ft3 - Weight_kg = Weight_lb × 0.453592 ## Step-by-Step Examples (Real Numbers) Below are worked examples you can replicate on a notepad for quick checks. Example 1: PTFE sheet (plate) — 24 in × 24 in × 1/2 in 1) Volume_in3 = 24 × 24 × 0.5 = 288 in³ 2) Volume_ft3 = 288 ÷ 1728 = 0.1667 ft³ 3) Weight_lb = 134 × 0.1667 = 22.33 lb 4) Weight_kg = 22.33 × 0.453592 = 10.13 kg So a 2 ft × 2 ft × 1/2 in PTFE sheet weighs about 22.3 lb. Example 2: PTFE round rod — 2.0 in diameter × 36 in length 1) Radius = 2.0/2 = 1.0 in 2) Cross-sectional area = π × 1.0² = 3.1416 in² 3) Volume_in3 = 3.1416 × 36 = 113.10 in³ 4) Volume_ft3 = 113.10 ÷ 1728 = 0.06545 ft³ 5) Weight_lb = 134 × 0.06545 = 8.77 lb 6) Weight_kg = 8.77 × 0.453592 = 3.98 kg A 2-inch PTFE rod, 3 feet long, is roughly 8.8 lb. Example 3: PTFE tube — 3.0 in OD × 0.25 in wall × 48 in length 1) OD radius = 3.0/2 = 1.5 in 2) ID = 3.0 − 2×0.25 = 2.5 in → ID radius = 1.25 in 3) Area difference = π × (1.5² − 1.25²) = π × (2.25 − 1.5625) = π × 0.6875 = 2.1598 in² 4) Volume_in3 = 2.1598 × 48 = 103.67 in³ 5) Volume_ft3 = 103.67 ÷ 1728 = 0.05999 ft³ 6) Weight_lb = 134 × 0.05999 = 8.04 lb 7) Weight_kg = 8.04 × 0.453592 = 3.65 kg That 4-foot length of 3" OD PTFE tubing weighs about 8.0 lb. Context check: A typical 4 ft × 8 ft sheet of 1/2-inch gypsum drywall is often around 50–60 lb depending on type (manufacturer data varies). A 4×8×1/2 PTFE sheet would be far heavier: Volume = 48×96×0.5 = 2304 in³ = 1.333 ft³ → Weight ≈ 134×1.333 = 178.7 lb. That’s a major handling and freight difference. ## Common Mistakes to Avoid (and a Pro Tip) Common Mistake #1: Mixing OD/ID and wall thickness on tubes. For tubes, the wall thickness is radial. The inner diameter is: ID = OD − 2×wall. Forgetting the “2×” is the most common error. Common Mistake #2: Using mm for length but inches for thickness (or vice versa). A 10× unit slip can blow up weight estimates. Keep unit system consistent across length, width, diameter, and thickness. Common Mistake #3: Assuming all PTFE has the same density. Unfilled PTFE is near 2.2 g/cm³, but filled grades can be significantly higher. For procurement, use the density on the datasheet when available (ASTM-referenced material certifications often list it). Common Mistake #4: Forgetting to account for machining allowance and kerf. If you’re buying a block to machine down, the purchased weight is based on the starting stock, not the finished part. Pro Tip: For rigging and shipping, add a practical allowance (often 2–5%) for packaging, pallets, and moisture-resistant wrapping, especially for large sheets and long bars that ship on skids. ## When to Use This Calculator vs. Manual Math Use a PTFE weight calculation when you need quick, repeatable estimates across multiple shapes and sizes—quoting takeoffs, comparing vendor stock, planning freight, or checking whether a rack or platform load is reasonable. It’s also handy when converting between metric and imperial dimensions without redoing geometry each time. Do it manually when: (1) the PTFE is filled or expanded and you have a certified density that differs from 134 lb/ft³, (2) the part has complex pockets/chamfers that materially reduce volume, or (3) you need engineering-grade mass properties (center of gravity, moment of inertia) for lifting plans or dynamic systems. In those cases, start with the same volume × density concept, but use the exact geometry and the exact density from the material certification or manufacturer datasheet. ## Authoritative Sources This calculator uses formulas and reference data drawn from the following sources: - [USDA Forest Products Laboratory](https://www.fpl.fs.usda.gov/) - [DOE — Energy Saver](https://www.energy.gov/energysaver/energy-saver) - [EPA — Energy Resources](https://www.epa.gov/energy) ## Frequently Asked Questions ### How do I calculate the weight of a PTFE (Teflon) sheet? Select “Flat Plate / Sheet,” enter length, width, and thickness, and the calculator multiplies the volume by PTFE density (134 lb/ft³). It outputs weight in both pounds and kilograms, plus volume in ft³ and m³. This is handy for estimating shipping weight and verifying material takeoffs. ### What density does this PTFE weight calculator use? It uses a density of 134 lb/ft³ (about 2,146 kg/m³). That’s a typical value for solid PTFE, but real products can vary by grade, fillers (glass, carbon, bronze), and manufacturing method. If you’re working with filled PTFE, your actual weight may be noticeably higher than the estimate. ### How is the weight of a PTFE rod or round bar calculated? Choose “Round Bar / Rod,” then enter diameter and length. The calculator finds the cylindrical volume using π × (diameter/2)² × length and converts it to weight using the PTFE density. This is useful for procurement when you need quick weight checks for long cut lengths. ### How do you calculate the weight of a PTFE tube (pipe) with wall thickness? Select “Hollow Tube / Pipe,” enter outside diameter, wall thickness, and length. The calculator subtracts the inner cylinder volume from the outer cylinder volume, then multiplies by density to get weight. Make sure the wall thickness is less than the radius; otherwise the inner diameter becomes invalid. ### Can I use metric dimensions (mm, cm, meters) and still get accurate results? Yes—set the unit system to metric and enter your dimensions in metric units; the calculator converts them internally before computing volume and weight. The results are shown in both kg and lb so you can match vendor quotes or shipping paperwork. Double-check that you’re using mm for thickness and wall thickness if that’s how your drawing is dimensioned. ### How accurate is this PTFE weight estimate, and what are the limitations? The math is accurate for ideal shapes and a constant density, but real-world parts may weigh different due to density tolerances, fillers, voids, porosity, and machining allowances. Also, nominal sizes (like “1 inch rod”) can differ from actual measured diameter, which changes weight more than people expect. For purchasing, treat this as a solid estimate and confirm with supplier certs or scale weight when it matters. ### What’s a real-world use case for a PTFE weight calculator in construction or fabrication? It’s commonly used to estimate the weight of PTFE bearing pads, slide plates, shims, wear strips, and insulating components for handling and shipping planning. It also helps compare quotes when vendors price by weight or when you need to keep lift plans within limits. If you’re cutting from stock, you can quickly estimate how much material (and cost) a set of parts will consume. ### How does the Teflon (PTFE) Weight Calculator work? The calculator converts your dimensions into volume using the appropriate geometric formula (sheet: length × width × thickness; rod: π × (diameter/2)² × length; tube: π × ((OD/2)² − (ID/2)²) × length). It then multiplies the volume by the selected PTFE density to estimate mass. If you enter dimensions in mm or cm, it internally converts them to a consistent unit system before calculating. ## Sources - [DOE — Energy Saver](https://www.energy.gov/energysaver/energy-saver) - [USDA Forest Products Laboratory](https://www.fpl.fs.usda.gov/) - [EPA — Energy Resources](https://www.epa.gov/energy) - [USGS — Science for a Changing World](https://www.usgs.gov/) - [NIST — Weights and Measures](https://www.nist.gov/pml/owm) --- ## Reference - **Calculator page:** https://procalc.ai/construction/teflon - **This markdown file:** https://procalc.ai/construction/teflon.md ### AI & Developer Resources - **LLM index (short):** https://procalc.ai/llms.txt - **LLM index (full, with content):** https://procalc.ai/llms-full.txt - **MCP server:** https://procalc.ai/api/mcp - **Materials JSON API:** https://procalc.ai/api/materials.json - **Developer docs:** https://procalc.ai/developers - **Sitemap:** https://procalc.ai/sitemap.xml - **Robots:** https://procalc.ai/robots.txt ### How to Cite > ProCalc.ai. 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