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The Scaffold Calculator helps contractors estimate scaffold component quantities and verify OSHA safety compliance. Calculate frames, braces, planks, guardrails, and safety equipment needed for different scaffold types.
Proper scaffold planning ensures adequate materials and compliance with OSHA safety requirements. The calculator supports frame scaffold, system scaffold, and tube-and-coupler systems, calculating components based on height, length, and deck levels.
Enter scaffold dimensions, type, and deck levels to calculate component quantities including frames, cross braces, planks, guardrails, base plates, and couplers. The tool also identifies OSHA safety requirements including tie-ins, access ladders, and fall protection.
Features
Everything you need
- Multiple scaffold type support
- Component quantity calculations
- OSHA safety requirement checks
- Tie-in and access requirements
- Guardrail and fall protection
- Frame, system, and tube scaffold
- Deck level calculations
How it works
Simple workflow
- 1Enter scaffold height and length
- 2Select scaffold type
- 3Specify working deck levels
- 4Review calculated component quantities
- 5Check OSHA safety requirements
Use cases
Built for real-world scenarios
Material estimation
Estimate scaffold component quantities for project planning and material ordering.
Safety compliance
Verify scaffold designs meet OSHA safety requirements for tie-ins, guardrails, and access.
Cost estimation
Calculate scaffold rental or purchase costs based on component quantities.
Site planning
Plan scaffold placement and identify safety equipment requirements.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Frames = (Length ÷ Bay Width) × 2 × (Height ÷ Lift Height). For 50 ft length, 20 ft height, 5 ft bays: (50÷5) × 2 × (20÷6.5) = 10 × 2 × 4 = 80 frames.
OSHA requires: Guardrails at 42" height, mid-rails, toe boards, proper access (ladders), tie-ins every 13 ft vertical and 20 ft horizontal, and competent person inspection.
Bay width: Frame scaffold 5 ft, System scaffold 10 ft, Tube-and-coupler 6.5 ft. Bay width affects component quantities and scaffold stability.
Tie-ins required: Every 13 ft vertically and 20 ft horizontally. For 20 ft height × 50 ft length: (20÷13) × (50÷20) = 2 × 3 = 6 tie-in points minimum.
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We're always looking to improve our calculators. If you have ideas for new features, improvements, or found something that could work better, we'd love to hear from you.
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