A traditional load cell (single‑axis) is like a bathroom scale – it only measures force straight down (compression). It cannot tell you if you're also pushing sideways or twisting. But in robotics, automotive testing, aerospace, and even gaming controllers, forces rarely align perfectly with one axis.
3‑axis force sensors solve this by measuring all three orthogonal components: Fx (side‑to‑side), Fy (forward/backward), and Fz (up/down).
Your hand feels all three forces simultaneously. A 3‑axis force sensor does the same, but with electronics.
Another analogy: a joystick on a gaming controller. Tilt it forward/back (Y), tilt it left/right (X), and press down (Z) – three axes of input. A 3‑axis sensor measures the actual forces behind those movements.
A 3‑axis force sensor outputs three independent signals, each proportional to the force along one orthogonal direction:
The sensor is usually mounted so that these directions align with the user's coordinate system. For example, on a robot wrist, Fx might be the direction the robot reaches sideways, Fy forward, and Fz upward.
Most 3‑axis force sensors use strain gauge technology – the same principle as a simple load cell, but multiplied.
The key challenge is crosstalk – ensuring that a pure Fz load does not produce an Fx output. Good design achieves crosstalk below 1–2% of full scale.
| Feature | 1‑Axis (Single) | 3‑Axis (Fx, Fy, Fz) | 6‑Axis (Fx, Fy, Fz + Mx, My, Mz) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Measures | Force in one direction only (e.g., compression) | Three orthogonal forces | Three forces + three torques (moments) |
| Typical output | 1 signal (mV/V) | 3 separate signals | 6 independent signals |
| Complexity | Low (simple load cell) | Medium (requires decoupling) | High (complex mechanical design) |
| Applications | Scales, simple force gauges | Robotics, biomechanics, touch input | Robot wrist force/torque control, wind tunnel balances |
| Cost range | $ | $$ | $$$ |
A 3‑axis sensor tells you how hard you are pushing in each direction, but it cannot tell you if you are twisting the object. Twisting forces are called moments or torques:
Thus, 3‑axis sensors are ideal when forces dominate and torques are negligible. For complete understanding, engineers eventually move to 6‑axis force/torque sensors – the topic for another article.
The journey of force sensing has followed the needs of automation and robotics:
Today, 3‑axis sensors are widely available and cost‑effective, while 6‑axis sensors remain more expensive and are used where torque information is critical.
A 3‑axis force sensor is a powerful tool that measures orthogonal forces Fx, Fy, and Fz simultaneously. It bridges the gap between simple single‑axis scales and complex 6‑axis torque sensors. Whether you're building a robotic gripper, designing a smart prosthetic, or simply curious about how your smartphone senses pressure, understanding multi‑axis force sensing opens new possibilities.
What’s next? If you need to measure twisting forces as well, explore 6‑axis force/torque sensors. If you want to experiment with 3‑axis sensing, many affordable sensor modules (e.g., based on strain gauge or MEMS technology) are available for prototyping.
At Galoce, we manufacture precision 3‑axis and 6‑axis force sensors for industrial, medical, and research applications. Contact us for a sensor selection guide
3‑axis force sensors measure forces in X, Y, Z directions for applications including robotics assembly, automotive wheel testing, medical rehab, sports biomechanics, aerospace structures, and human-machine interfaces.
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A 3‑axis force sensor measures forces in three perpendicular directions (Fx, Fy, Fz) simultaneously. It uses multiple strain gauge bridges to capture full spatial loads for robotics, biomechanics, and automotive testing.
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