Log Weight Calculator

Calculate log weight by wood species, dimensions, and moisture content. Supports 20+ wood types including oak, pine, maple, cedar, and exotic hardwoods. Perfect for logging, firewood, milling, and timber sales.

Enter Log Details

🪵 Log Dimensions
Measure at the smallest end for accuracy
Standard log length: 8 feet
🌳 Wood Species
Density shown is for kiln-dried (12% MC)
💧 Moisture Content
Enter total quantity
💰 Price Calculator BONUS
$
Average: $2-$8 per BF depending on species

Calculation Results

Enter dimensions to see results
Total Weight
0 lbs
Weight (kg)
0 kg
Weight (tons)
0 tons
Per Log
0 lbs
Board Feet
0 BF
Estimated Value
$0.00
📊 Calculation Details

Complete Log Weight Calculator Guide

Need to calculate log weight for logging, timber sales, firewood, or milling? Our comprehensive log weight calculator helps you accurately estimate weight based on wood species, dimensions, and moisture content. Whether you're dealing with green logs, air-dried timber, or kiln-dried lumber, get precise weight calculations in seconds.

Basic Log Weight Formula

Weight = Volume × Density × (1 + Moisture Content Factor)

Volume = π × (Diameter/2)² × Length

Our calculator supports 20+ wood species, accounts for moisture content from green to kiln-dried, calculates board feet for timber value, and provides complete cost estimates - the most comprehensive free log weight calculator available!

Wood Density by Species (Kiln-Dried at 12% MC)

Understanding wood density is essential for accurate weight calculations:

Wood Species Density (lb/ft³) Density (kg/m³) Category Common Uses
Cedar (Red) 23 369 Softwood - Light Decking, fencing, shingles
White Pine 25 400 Softwood - Light Furniture, trim, paneling
Aspen 26 417 Hardwood - Light Pulp, pallets, crating
Basswood 26 417 Hardwood - Light Carving, musical instruments
Spruce 28 449 Softwood - Medium Construction, pulp, instruments
Poplar 28 449 Hardwood - Light Cabinets, furniture, pallets
Hemlock 29 465 Softwood - Medium Framing, sheathing, pulp
Cypress 32 513 Softwood - Medium Outdoor construction, boats
Douglas Fir 34 545 Softwood - Heavy Framing, beams, flooring
Pine (Southern Yellow) 35 561 Softwood - Heavy Framing, flooring, furniture
Cherry (Black) 35 561 Hardwood - Medium Fine furniture, cabinets
Walnut (Black) 38 609 Hardwood - Medium Furniture, gunstocks, veneer
Ash (White) 42 673 Hardwood - Medium Tool handles, baseball bats
Birch (Yellow) 43 689 Hardwood - Heavy Flooring, furniture, plywood
Maple (Sugar) 44 705 Hardwood - Heavy Flooring, furniture, butcher blocks
Oak (Red) 44 705 Hardwood - Heavy Flooring, furniture, cabinets
Beech 45 721 Hardwood - Heavy Furniture, flooring, tool handles
Oak (White) 47 753 Hardwood - Heavy Flooring, barrels, boats
Hickory 51 817 Hardwood - Very Heavy Tool handles, flooring, smoking

Moisture Content Impact on Weight

Moisture content dramatically affects log weight - often doubling or tripling the weight of green wood compared to kiln-dried:

Wood Condition Moisture Content Weight Multiplier Description
Green (Freshly Cut) 40-80% MC 1.6 - 2.2× Just felled, very heavy, water seeping
Partially Seasoned 30-40% MC 1.4 - 1.6× Drying for 2-4 months
Air-Dried (Seasoned) 15-25% MC 1.2 - 1.3× Dried 6-12 months outdoors
Kiln-Dried (Standard) 10-14% MC 1.1 - 1.15× Commercial lumber, furniture-ready
Kiln-Dried (Furniture) 6-10% MC 1.05 - 1.1× High-end furniture, cabinetry
Oven-Dry (Reference) 0% MC 1.0× Laboratory standard, theoretical

Key Insight: A green oak log can weigh 80-100 lbs/ft³, while kiln-dried oak is only 47 lbs/ft³!

Detailed Calculation Examples

Example 1: Green Oak Log for Milling

Log: Red Oak, 16" diameter × 8 ft long, green (60% MC)

Step 1: Volume = π × (16/24)² × 8 = 11.17 ft³

Step 2: Dry weight = 11.17 × 44 lb/ft³ = 491 lbs

Step 3: Moisture multiplier = 1 + 0.60 = 1.60

Step 4: Green weight = 491 × 1.60 = 786 lbs

Board Feet: (16² × 8) ÷ 16 = 128 BF

Example 2: Seasoned Firewood

Wood: Hickory, 12" diameter × 16" length, air-dried (20% MC)

Step 1: Volume = π × (12/24)² × (16/12) = 1.05 ft³

Step 2: Dry weight = 1.05 × 51 lb/ft³ = 53.6 lbs

Step 3: Moisture multiplier = 1.20

Step 4: Seasoned weight = 53.6 × 1.20 = 64 lbs

Note: One of the heaviest firewoods!

Example 3: Cedar Fence Posts

Posts: Red Cedar, 6" diameter × 8 ft long, 25 posts, 15% MC

Step 1: Volume = π × (6/24)² × 8 = 1.57 ft³

Step 2: Weight per post = 1.57 × 23 × 1.15 = 41.5 lbs

Step 3: Total weight = 41.5 × 25 = 1,038 lbs

Practical: Easily handled, ~520 lbs per truckload of 12-13 posts

Board Feet Calculation

Board feet (BF) measure usable lumber volume - critical for timber value:

Doyle Log Rule (Most Common):

Formula: BF = ((D - 4)² × L) ÷ 16

D = Diameter in inches (small end)

L = Length in feet

Example: 16" × 8 ft log = ((16-4)² × 8) ÷ 16 = 72 BF

International 1/4" Log Rule (More Accurate):

  • Accounts for saw kerf (blade thickness)
  • More accurate for larger logs
  • Used by professional sawmills
  • Typically yields 20-30% more BF than Doyle

Scribner Log Rule (Eastern US):

  • Diagram-based measurement
  • Conservative estimates
  • Common in timber sales

Weight by Log Size - Quick Reference

Approximate weights for common log sizes (air-dried oak, 20% MC):

Diameter 8 ft Log 10 ft Log 12 ft Log 16 ft Log
6 inches 66 lbs 83 lbs 99 lbs 132 lbs
8 inches 118 lbs 147 lbs 177 lbs 235 lbs
10 inches 184 lbs 230 lbs 276 lbs 368 lbs
12 inches 265 lbs 331 lbs 397 lbs 530 lbs
16 inches 471 lbs 589 lbs 706 lbs 942 lbs
20 inches 736 lbs 920 lbs 1,104 lbs 1,472 lbs
24 inches 1,060 lbs 1,325 lbs 1,590 lbs 2,120 lbs

Note: Green logs weigh 40-80% more than values shown above.

Timber Value Estimation

Understanding timber value helps with logging decisions and sales:

Typical Prices per Board Foot (2024):

  • Low-Grade Logs (pulp, pallets): $0.50 - $2.00/BF
  • Construction Grade: $2.00 - $4.00/BF
  • Select Grade Hardwoods: $4.00 - $8.00/BF
  • Premium Hardwoods (Walnut, Cherry): $6.00 - $15.00/BF
  • Exotic/Specialty Woods: $10.00 - $30.00+/BF

Value Factors:

  • Species: Oak, cherry, walnut command premium prices
  • Grade: Clear, straight logs worth 2-5× more
  • Size: Larger diameter logs yield more value
  • Defects: Knots, rot, splits drastically reduce value
  • Market: Local demand varies significantly
  • Access: Road access affects logging costs

Firewood Calculations

Converting logs to firewood requires different calculations:

Standard Cord of Firewood:

  • Volume: 128 cubic feet (4' × 4' × 8')
  • Actual wood: ~85 ft³ (rest is air space)
  • Weight range: 2,000 - 5,000 lbs depending on species & MC

Firewood Weight by Species (Cord, air-dried 20% MC):

  • Hickory: 4,300 - 4,800 lbs (heaviest)
  • Oak: 3,800 - 4,200 lbs
  • Maple: 3,600 - 4,000 lbs
  • Ash: 3,400 - 3,800 lbs
  • Birch: 3,300 - 3,700 lbs
  • Pine: 2,500 - 3,000 lbs
  • Poplar: 2,200 - 2,600 lbs (lightest common)

Logs to Firewood Conversion:

Example: How many 12" × 8 ft oak logs = 1 cord?

Volume per log = π × (0.5)² × 8 = 6.28 ft³

Usable wood per cord = 85 ft³

Logs needed = 85 ÷ 6.28 = ~14 logs

Drying Time Estimates

Moisture content affects weight and usability:

Air-Drying Time (Split Firewood):

  • Softwoods (Pine, Spruce): 3-6 months
  • Medium Hardwoods (Cherry, Ash): 6-12 months
  • Dense Hardwoods (Oak, Hickory): 12-24 months
  • Very Dense (Osage Orange): 24-36 months

Drying Rate Factors:

  • Wood size: Split wood dries 3-4× faster than rounds
  • Bark removal: Speeds drying by 30-50%
  • Air circulation: Stacked with space = faster drying
  • Weather: Hot, dry, windy = faster drying
  • Species: Dense woods take much longer

Kiln-Drying (Commercial Lumber):

  • Typical time: 2-8 weeks depending on species & thickness
  • Temperature: 120-180°F with humidity control
  • Cost: $0.30 - $1.00 per board foot
  • Benefit: Precise MC control, kills insects/mold

Handling & Transportation

Log weight affects equipment and safety requirements:

Manual Handling:

  • Under 50 lbs: One person can carry (up to 10" diameter)
  • 50-100 lbs: Two people or hand truck
  • 100-300 lbs: Tractor, ATV with winch, or cant hook
  • 300+ lbs: Heavy equipment required

Vehicle Capacity:

  • Pickup truck (1/2 ton): ~1,500 lbs safely (3-5 large logs)
  • Pickup truck (3/4 ton): ~2,500 lbs (5-8 large logs)
  • Pickup truck (1 ton): ~3,500 lbs (8-12 large logs)
  • Log trailer (tandem): 10,000 - 14,000 lbs (full load)
  • Semi log truck: 40,000 - 80,000 lbs (20-40 tons)

Safety Considerations:

  • Secure loads with chains or straps (minimum 2 points)
  • Distribute weight evenly in truck bed
  • Check tire pressure and axle ratings
  • Use proper lifting techniques (bend knees, not back)
  • Never stand downhill of unsecured logs
  • Use wedges to prevent rolling

Common Measurement Mistakes

Avoid these errors for accurate weight estimation:

  • Measuring large end: Always measure small end diameter
  • Ignoring moisture: Green vs dry can double the weight
  • Wrong species: Hickory weighs 2× more than cedar
  • Including bark: Bark adds 10-15% weight (minimal volume)
  • Forgetting taper: Logs aren't perfect cylinders
  • Unit confusion: Cubic feet vs board feet are different

Log Grading System

Timber value varies dramatically by log grade:

Hardwood Log Grades (Factory Lumber Logs):

  • F1 (Prime): 16"+ diameter, straight, clear, 50%+ clear faces
  • F2 (Select): 13"+ diameter, mostly clear, 33%+ clear
  • F3 (Standard): 11"+ diameter, some defects acceptable
  • Below Grade: Pallet, pulp, firewood, chip-n-saw

Value Difference:

  • F1 logs can sell for 3-5× more than F3
  • One F1 walnut log can be worth $1,000-$3,000
  • Same size F3 might be worth $200-$500

Specialty Uses & Pricing

Veneer Logs (Highest Value):

  • Must be near-perfect quality
  • 18"+ diameter for hardwoods
  • Straight, no knots, unique grain patterns
  • Can command $10-$50+ per board foot
  • Species: Walnut, cherry, figured maple, curly oak

Specialty Markets:

  • Woodturning blanks: $5-$50 each depending on size/species
  • Live-edge slabs: $10-$50/BF for premium pieces
  • Burl wood: $5-$100+ per pound (exceptional grain)
  • Spalted wood: Fungal patterns, premium pricing
  • Instrument wood: Specific needs, high prices

Environmental Considerations

  • Carbon storage: Wood sequesters ~1 ton CO₂ per ton of dry wood
  • Sustainable harvesting: Selective cutting maintains forests
  • Bark mulch: Valuable byproduct (10-15% of log weight)
  • Sawdust/chips: Used for pellets, animal bedding, composite boards
  • Efficiency: Modern mills recover 50-65% of log as lumber

Tools for Log Work

Essential equipment for handling logs:

  • Cant hook/peavey: Rolling and positioning logs ($40-$100)
  • Log tongs: Lifting with equipment ($50-$200)
  • Chainsaw: Cutting to length ($200-$800)
  • Log arch: Skidding logs with ATV ($300-$1,500)
  • Moisture meter: Measuring MC ($30-$300)
  • Diameter tape: Quick circumference to diameter ($10-$30)
  • Log scales: Professional measurement tools ($500-$2,000)

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