⚙️ Motor Pulley RPM Calculator
Calculate driven pulley speed, belt drive ratio, belt velocity, and ideal pulley sizes for any motor setup
| Machine / Application | Typical Motor RPM | Target Driven RPM | Required Ratio | Belt Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drill Press (Wood) | 1725 | 250 – 3000 | 0.14 – 1.74:1 | V-Belt |
| Metal Lathe | 1750 | 50 – 2000 | 0.03 – 1.14:1 | V-Belt |
| Band Saw (Wood) | 1725 | 1200 – 1800 | 0.7 – 1.04:1 | V-Belt |
| Bench Grinder | 3450 | 3450 | 1:1 | Direct / Belt |
| Air Compressor | 1750 | 700 – 1050 | 0.4 – 0.6:1 | V-Belt |
| Conveyor Belt | 1750 | 30 – 300 | 0.017 – 0.17:1 | V-Belt / Chain |
| Wood Shaper | 3450 | 7000 – 10000 | 2 – 2.9:1 | Flat Belt |
| CNC Spindle | 1750 | 6000 – 24000 | 3.4 – 13.7:1 | Timing Belt |
| Cooling Fan | 1750 | 800 – 2500 | 0.46 – 1.43:1 | V-Belt / Flat |
| Centrifugal Pump | 1750 | 1200 – 3500 | 0.69 – 2:1 | V-Belt |
| Belt Type | Cross Section / Size | Max Belt Speed (ft/min) | Efficiency | Max Ratio (Single) | Best Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| V-Belt (A) | 1/2" wide x 5/16" deep | 4000 | 93–96% | 7:1 | General workshop |
| V-Belt (B) | 21/32" wide x 13/32" deep | 4500 | 93–96% | 7:1 | Heavy machinery |
| V-Belt (C) | 7/8" wide x 17/32" deep | 4500 | 93–96% | 7:1 | Industrial drives |
| Flat Belt | Various widths, 3–6mm thick | 6000 | 88–92% | 8:1 | High-speed, long center |
| Timing (HTD 5M) | 5mm pitch | 8000 | 97–99% | 5:1 | CNC, synchronous drives |
| Round Belt | 3–10mm dia. | 2000 | 85–90% | 4:1 | Light duty, serpentine |
| Chain (#35) | 3/8" pitch | 2500 | 97–99% | 10:1 | Positive drive, low speed |
| Chain (#41) | 1/2" pitch | 3000 | 97–99% | 10:1 | Medium duty positive drive |
| Driver (in) | Driven (in) | Drive Ratio | Output @ 1750 RPM | Output @ 3450 RPM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 6 | 3:1 (reduce) | 583 RPM | 1150 RPM |
| 3 | 6 | 2:1 (reduce) | 875 RPM | 1725 RPM |
| 4 | 6 | 1.5:1 (reduce) | 1167 RPM | 2300 RPM |
| 4 | 4 | 1:1 (direct) | 1750 RPM | 3450 RPM |
| 6 | 4 | 0.67:1 (increase) | 2625 RPM | 5175 RPM |
| 6 | 3 | 0.5:1 (increase) | 3500 RPM | 6900 RPM |
| 8 | 2 | 0.25:1 (increase) | 7000 RPM | 13800 RPM |
| 3 | 12 | 4:1 (reduce) | 438 RPM | 863 RPM |
The RPM of a motor pulley depends on the speed by which the pulleys twist, and on how that speed relates to the size of the pulleys used. The main rule is fairly easy. The RPM of the first pulley, times its diameter, matches the RPM of the second pulley times its diameter.
This way one can count any of the four sizes, if one knows the three others.
How Pulley Size Affects Motor Speed
Calculators for pulleys help to estimate the motor or driven speed and the right size of pulleys and gears. Some of those tools show helpful diagrams that let you visually check the size of pulleys, their RPM, the length of the belt and the speed. That makes the understanding of the causes much simpler.
The speed of the engine is entered in revolutions per minute. It is the speed of the driving pulley. The driven pulley then twists at another speed, that depneds on its size.
For instance, if the engine runs at 1800 RPM and one wants around 300 RPM at the shaft, the overall ratio is 1800 divided by 300, which equals 6.
The ratios of pulleys matter a lot during change of engines. When one doubles the motor speed, one must halve the size of the motor pulley, so that the driven pulley stays at the same speed. Assume that you have an engine at 3500 RPM with a 2-inch pulley.
If one replaces it with an engine at 1750 RPM, then you need to put a 4-inch pulley on it instead.
Such problems appear commonly with compressors. One common case deals with a pump with a wanted speed of 1180 RPM and a 16-inch pulley. In another case some switched from an engine at 1750 RPM with a 7-inch pulley to an engine at 3505 RPM, so they had to estimate the precise size of the pulley.
Being wrong in the ratio can over-speed the pump, which is a bad result.
Change of the size of a pulley alters the speed, but not the produced power. So there is real danger of overloading the engine. The torque drops when the speed grows.
Engines with lower speeds indeed give bigger torque at the same power level.
For big drops in speed, like from 3480 RPM down too around 60 RPM, a single system is not practical. Multi-stage pulleys or gears can keep the size of pulleys in a reasonable limit. There is also a limit to how small a pulley can be.
Around 2.25 inches is close to the smallest for certain horsepower ratings.
On a saw with a belt, if a small driven pulley is bound to a bigger 4-inch pulley, the belt covers the same distance for both, but the bigger pulley twists at fewer RPM. A 1.75-inch pulley in one case gave around 302 RPM at the fan. Precise counting ofthe numbers ensures that everything runs safely.
