R Series Helical Gearbox Torque Calculation: Step-by-Step

R Series Helical Gearbox Torque Calculation: Step-by-Step Engineering Guide


Key Takeaways

CalculationFormulaCommon Error
Output torqueT₂ = T₁ × i × ηUsing efficiency = 1.0
Input torqueT₁ = P × 9,550 / n₁Using synchronous RPM
Design torqueT_design = T₂ × f_sSkipping service factor
Overhung loadF = 2.0-2.5 × (T/r)Using simplified F = T/r
Motor powerP = T₂ × n₂ / (9,550 × η)Ignoring efficiency losses

Bottom line: Three numbers drive every R Series torque calculation — output torque, service factor, and efficiency. Get these right and frame size selection is straightforward. Approximate any of them and the gearbox is either oversized (unnecessary cost) or undersized (premature failure).


Table of Contents

  1. Why Torque Calculation Errors Are Expensive
  2. Fundamental Torque Formulas
  3. Step 1: Calculate Required Output Torque
  4. Step 2: Calculate Input Torque and Verify Motor Power
  5. Step 3: Apply Service Factor
  6. Step 4: Account for Efficiency
  7. Step 5: Calculate Overhung Load
  8. Worked Examples by Application
  9. Torque Calculation Quick Reference
  10. FAQ: Helical Gearbox Torque Calculation

1. Why Torque Calculation Errors Are Expensive

An automotive parts manufacturer installed eight R Series gearboxes on a assembly conveyor in 2022. The engineer used the running torque directly from the load calculation — 380 Nm — and selected R57 units (rated 700 Nm). Comfortable margin. Looked correct on paper.

Fourteen months later, four units had failed. The conveyor ran 22 hours per day with 35 starts per hour and frequent reversing. Actual design torque with correct service factor: 380 × 2.50 = 950 Nm. The R57 was running at 136% of rated torque every start cycle. Every unit was undersized from day one.

Replacement cost, production downtime, and expedited freight: $34,000. The correctly sized R67 units would have cost $2,400 more upfront.

Torque calculation is not complex — it requires four formulas and one table. The errors happen when engineers skip the service factor step or use simplified overhung load formulas. This guide covers every calculation step with the engineering detail needed to select R Series gearboxes correctly the first time.


2. Fundamental Torque Formulas

Before working through the steps, establish the core relationships. Every torque calculation for R Series gearbox selection derives from these.

Power-Torque-Speed Relationship

P = T × n / 9,550

Rearranged:

T = P × 9,550 / n

Where:

  • P = Power (kW)
  • T = Torque (Nm)
  • n = Rotational speed (RPM)
  • 9,550 = Unit conversion constant (for kW, Nm, RPM)

Torque Transmission Through Gearbox

T₂ = T₁ × i × η

Where:

  • T₂ = Output torque (Nm)
  • T₁ = Input torque (Nm)
  • i = Reduction ratio
  • η = Gearbox efficiency (decimal)

Required Motor Power

P_motor = (T₂ × n₂) / (9,550 × η)

Design Torque with Service Factor

T_design = T₂ × f_s

Overhung Load (Engineering Formula)

F_radial = 2.0 to 2.5 × (T₂ / r)

These five formulas cover every standard R Series torque calculation. The steps below apply them in sequence.


3. Step 1: Calculate Required Output Torque

Output torque is the mechanical load the gearbox output shaft must deliver. Calculate it from the driven equipment — do not estimate.

Method A: From Force and Radius (Conveyor and Linear Drives)

T₂ = F × r

Where:

  • F = Total resistance force at drive point (N)
  • r = Drive pulley, sprocket, or gear pitch radius (m)

Resistance force for conveyors:

F = (m_load + m_belt) × g × (μ × cosθ + sinθ)

Where:

  • m_load = Material or product mass (kg)
  • m_belt = Belt or chain mass (kg)
  • g = 9.81 m/s²
  • μ = Rolling friction coefficient
  • θ = Conveyor inclination angle (degrees)

Typical friction coefficients:

Conveyor TypeFriction Coefficient (μ)
Roller conveyor, light load0.02-0.03
Roller conveyor, heavy load0.03-0.05
Slider bed belt conveyor0.05-0.08
Chain conveyor0.05-0.07
Screw conveyor0.20-0.40 (material dependent)

Example — horizontal belt conveyor:

  • Total load (belt + product): 1,200 kg
  • Friction coefficient: 0.03
  • Inclination: 0°
  • Drive pulley radius: 0.20m
F = 1,200 × 9.81 × (0.03 × cos0° + sin0°)
F = 11,772 × (0.03 + 0)
F = 353 N

T₂ = 353 × 0.20 = 71 Nm

Example — inclined belt conveyor (12°):

  • Total load: 1,200 kg
  • Friction coefficient: 0.03
  • Inclination: 12°
  • Drive pulley radius: 0.20m
F = 1,200 × 9.81 × (0.03 × cos12° + sin12°)
F = 11,772 × (0.03 × 0.978 + 0.208)
F = 11,772 × (0.029 + 0.208)
F = 11,772 × 0.237 = 2,790 N

T₂ = 2,790 × 0.20 = 558 Nm

Note: The inclined conveyor requires 7.9× more torque than the horizontal version carrying the same load. This is why inclination angle must be included in every inclined conveyor calculation.

Method B: From Power and Speed (Rotary Equipment)

T₂ = P × 9,550 / n₂

Where:

  • P = Required shaft power (kW)
  • n₂ = Output shaft speed (RPM)

Example — mixer drive:

  • Required mixing power: 5.5 kW
  • Required mixer speed: 85 RPM
T₂ = 5.5 × 9,550 / 85 = 618 Nm

Example — pump drive:

  • Pump required power: 3.7 kW (from pump curve)
  • Pump speed: 120 RPM
T₂ = 3.7 × 9,550 / 120 = 294 Nm

Method C: From Equipment Nameplate (Replacement Applications)

When replacing an existing gearbox, extract torque from the existing unit’s nameplate:

  • Rated output torque (if shown)
  • Or calculate from rated power and output speed

Verify against actual application load — the existing unit may have been oversized or undersized. Do not simply match nameplate values without checking the actual load.


4. Step 2: Calculate Input Torque and Verify Motor Power

With output torque known, calculate input torque and verify motor adequacy.

Input Torque Calculation

Rearranging the transmission formula:

T₁ = T₂ / (i × η)

Example:

  • Output torque: 558 Nm (inclined conveyor)
  • Ratio: 30:1
  • Efficiency: 0.95 (R Series typical)
T₁ = 558 / (30 × 0.95) = 558 / 28.5 = 19.6 Nm

Required Motor Power

P_required = T₂ × n₂ / (9,550 × η)

Alternative — from input shaft:

P_required = T₁ × n₁ / 9,550

Example continued:

  • Output torque: 558 Nm
  • Output speed: 48 RPM
  • Efficiency: 0.95
P_required = 558 × 48 / (9,550 × 0.95)
P_required = 26,784 / 9,073 = 2.95 kW

Select motor: 4.0 kW (next standard size above 2.95 kW)

Motor Selection Note

Always select the next standard motor size above calculated requirement. Standard motor sizes (kW): 0.18, 0.25, 0.37, 0.55, 0.75, 1.1, 1.5, 2.2, 3.0, 4.0, 5.5, 7.5, 11.0, 15.0, 18.5, 22.0, 30.0, 37.0, 45.0, 55.0, 75.0

Never use motor at 100% of calculated power requirement. Motor efficiency drops at full load. Starting current creates torque spikes. Minimum recommended motor power: 120% of calculated requirement.

P_motor_selected ≥ 1.20 × P_required

5. Step 3: Apply Service Factor

This is the most frequently skipped step and the primary cause of premature gearbox failure. Service factor converts running torque to design torque — the actual value used for frame size selection.

Why Running Torque Understimates Real Load

Running torque is steady-state load under normal operating conditions. Real applications impose additional loads:

  • Starting torque: 1.5-2.5× running torque for direct-on-line motor starts
  • Shock loads: Impact events exceeding running torque by 2-5×
  • Cyclic loads: Repeated load reversals causing fatigue
  • Thermal effects: Efficiency changes with temperature affecting actual torque

Service factor is an empirical factor validated by decades of field data. It is not conservative over-engineering — it reflects the difference between calculated steady-state torque and actual dynamic loads.

Service Factor Formula

T_design = T₂_running × f_s

The gearbox must be selected on T_design, not T₂_running.

Service Factor Selection Table

Base service factor by hours and load type:

Hours/DayUniform LoadModerate ShockHeavy Shock
<20.801.001.25
2-101.001.251.50
10-161.251.501.75
>161.501.752.00

Application reference values:

ApplicationTypical Service Factor
Belt conveyor, smooth load, <10 hrs1.25-1.50
Belt conveyor, mixed load, >16 hrs1.75-2.00
Chain conveyor, standard duty1.75-2.00
Reversing conveyor2.00-2.25
Mixer, low viscosity1.25-1.50
Mixer, high viscosity1.75-2.25
Screw conveyor2.00-2.50
Bucket elevator2.00-2.50
Centrifugal pump1.25-1.50
Positive displacement pump1.75-2.25
Compressor1.50-2.00
Packaging machine, cyclic1.60-2.00

Incremental additions:

Operating ConditionAdd to Base
Reversing operation+0.25
Frequent starts (>30/hour)+0.25
Ambient temperature >40°C+0.25
VFD, full torque <20% rated speed+0.25
Shock loads, impact events+0.25 to +0.50

Service Factor Calculation Example

Application: Chain conveyor, food processing, 20 hours/day, reversing, 40 starts/hour

FactorValue
Base (heavy shock, >16 hrs)2.00
Reversing operation+0.25
Frequent starts (40/hour)+0.25
Total service factor2.50

Running torque: 480 Nm Design torque: 480 × 2.50 = 1,200 Nm

Frame size must be selected for 1,200 Nm — not 480 Nm.


6. Step 4: Account for Efficiency

R Series helical gearboxes are efficient compared to worm gears, but efficiency still affects three critical calculations: motor power sizing, heat generation, and actual output torque at load.

R Series Efficiency by Configuration

StagesTypical EfficiencyApplication
2-stage96-98% per stage, 95-96% overallRatios 3.66-20:1
3-stage96-98% per stage, 94-96% overallRatios 20-74:1

Factors affecting efficiency:

ConditionEffect on Efficiency
Light load (<25% rated)Reduces to 90-93%
Optimal load (50-80% rated)Peak efficiency 94-96%
High ambient temperatureReduces 1-3%
Degraded lubricantReduces 5-10%
New unit (break-in)Slightly lower, improves after 200 hours

Conservative Design Values

For initial selection calculations, use:

  • 2-stage R Series: η = 0.95
  • 3-stage R Series: η = 0.93

Using slightly conservative efficiency:

  • Motor sizing will be adequately sized (not undersized)
  • Thermal analysis will be conservative (safer)
  • Actual performance will meet or exceed calculated

Efficiency Impact on Motor Power

Example — mixer drive:

  • Required output: 5.5 kW at shaft
  • Gearbox efficiency: 0.95
  • Required motor input: 5.5 / 0.95 = 5.79 kW
  • Select: 7.5 kW motor (next standard size with adequate margin)

If efficiency ignored (η = 1.0):

  • Required motor input: 5.5 / 1.0 = 5.5 kW
  • Select: 5.5 kW motor
  • Actual load on 5.5 kW motor: 5.79 / 5.5 = 105% — motor runs overloaded

This is a real error pattern. Ignoring gearbox efficiency causes motor overloading.

Heat Generation Calculation

Heat generated by gearbox friction:

P_heat = P_input × (1 - η)

Example:

  • Input power: 7.5 kW
  • Efficiency: 0.95
  • Heat generated: 7.5 × (1 – 0.95) = 0.375 kW continuous

This heat must dissipate through the housing. For continuous-duty applications, verify this against the thermal power rating in the catalog.


7. Step 5: Calculate Overhung Load

Overhung load — radial force on the gearbox output shaft — is the second most common cause of premature bearing failure after service factor errors. The simplified formula used in many textbooks significantly underestimates actual load.

Why the Simplified Formula Is Wrong

The simplified formula:

F = T / r

Calculates only the tight-side belt tension. It ignores:

  • Slack-side belt tension (T2)
  • Belt pre-tension
  • Dynamic loads during acceleration
  • Centrifugal effects at higher speeds

For a typical V-belt drive with T1/T2 = 2:1:

T1 = 2 × T/r  (tight side)
T2 = T/r       (slack side)
F_actual = T1 + T2 = 3 × T/r

The simplified formula underestimates by in this case.

Engineering Formula for Overhung Load

For belt drives (V-belt, flat belt, timing belt):

F_radial = 2.0 to 2.5 × (T / r)

Use:

  • 2.0× for flat belts, well-tensioned, 180° wrap angle
  • 2.5× for V-belts, timing belts, or dynamic loading

For chain drives:

F_radial = 2.5 to 3.0 × (T / r)

Chain drives create pulsating loads from polygon effect (chain link engagement). Use 3.0× for heavy or shock-loaded chain drives.

For external gear drives:

F_radial = T / (r × cos α)

Where α = pressure angle (20° standard, cos20° = 0.940)

For direct coupling (flexible or rigid): Overhung load from coupling is typically negligible if properly aligned. Misalignment is the primary source of coupling-induced overhung load — verify alignment within specification.

Overhung Load Calculation Example

Application: V-belt drive, output torque 600 Nm, pulley radius 0.20m

F_radial = 2.5 × (600 / 0.20) = 2.5 × 3,000 = 7,500 N

Compare to catalog rating:

Catalog specifies overhung load at reference distance from housing face (e.g., 75mm for R67).

If actual pulley is mounted at 110mm from housing face:

F_allowed = F_catalog × (d_reference / d_actual)
F_allowed = 9,000 × (75 / 110) = 6,136 N

7,500 N > 6,136 N — Exceeds rating.

Solution options:

  1. Increase pulley diameter (reduces radial force)
  2. Upsize to next frame (higher overhung load rating)
  3. Add external pillow block bearing beyond pulley
  4. Use hollow shaft mount (eliminates overhung load entirely)

Effect of Pulley Diameter on Overhung Load

Since F = 2.5 × (T/r), larger pulley radius directly reduces radial force:

Pulley DiameterRadiusOverhung Load (600 Nm)
300mm0.150m10,000 N
400mm0.200m7,500 N
500mm0.250m6,000 N
600mm0.300m5,000 N

Increasing pulley diameter from 300mm to 500mm reduces overhung load by 40% — often the simplest solution when the catalog rating is marginally exceeded.


8. Worked Examples by Application

Example 1: Standard Belt Conveyor

Given:

  • Belt speed: 1.0 m/s
  • Drive pulley: 400mm diameter
  • Total conveyor load: 2,400 kg (belt + material), 60m length
  • Friction coefficient: 0.03
  • Inclination: 0° (horizontal)
  • Motor: 4-pole, 1,450 RPM
  • Operating: 16 hours/day, smooth load
  • Drive: V-belt

Step 1: Output torque

F = 2,400 × 9.81 × 0.03 = 706 N
n₂ = (1.0 × 60) / (π × 0.4) = 47.7 RPM
T₂ = 706 × 0.20 = 141 Nm

Step 2: Ratio and motor power

i = 1,450 / 47.7 = 30.4 → use 30.03:1 standard ratio
P_required = 141 × 47.7 / (9,550 × 0.95) = 0.74 kW
Select: 1.1 kW motor

Step 3: Service factor

  • Uniform load, 16 hours/day → f_s = 1.50
T_design = 141 × 1.50 = 212 Nm

Step 4: Frame size selection

  • Required: 212 Nm at 30:1
  • R37 rated 280 Nm at 30:1 → utilization 76% ✓

Step 5: Thermal verification

  • Motor power: 1.1 kW
  • R37 thermal rating: 2.5 kW
  • 1.1 kW < 2.5 kW ✓

Step 6: Overhung load

F = 2.5 × (212 / 0.20) = 2,650 N
R37 catalog rating at 50mm: 3,200 N
2,650 N < 3,200 N ✓

Result: R37, 30.03:1 ratio, 1.1 kW motor


Example 2: Reversing Chain Conveyor

Given:

  • Chain speed: 0.3 m/s
  • Drive sprocket: 250mm pitch diameter
  • Total load: 800 kg
  • Friction: 0.05
  • Inclination: 0°
  • Motor: 4-pole, 1,450 RPM
  • Operating: 20 hours/day, reversing, 50 starts/hour

Step 1: Output torque

F = 800 × 9.81 × 0.05 = 392 N
n₂ = (0.3 × 60) / (π × 0.25) = 22.9 RPM
T₂ = 392 × 0.125 = 49 Nm

Step 2: Ratio

i = 1,450 / 22.9 = 63.3 → use 65.23:1
n₂_actual = 1,450 / 65.23 = 22.2 RPM ✓

Step 3: Service factor

FactorValue
Base (heavy shock, >16 hrs)2.00
Reversing+0.25
Frequent starts (50/hr)+0.25
Total2.50
T_design = 49 × 2.50 = 123 Nm

Step 4: Frame size

  • Required: 123 Nm at 65.23:1
  • R27 rated 200 Nm at 65:1 → utilization 62% ✓

Step 5: Motor power

P_required = 49 × 22.9 / (9,550 × 0.93) = 0.127 kW
Select: 0.37 kW (next standard, provides starting torque margin)

Step 6: Overhung load (chain drive)

F = 3.0 × (123 / 0.125) = 2,952 N
R27 catalog rating at 40mm: 1,800 N
2,952 N > 1,800 N ✗ — Exceeds rating

Solution: Upsize to R37 (higher overhung load rating) R37 catalog at 40mm: 3,800 N 2,952 N < 3,800 N ✓

Final result: R37, 65.23:1, 0.37 kW motor

Note: Frame size driven by overhung load, not torque. This is common in chain drive applications — always check overhung load even when torque appears comfortable.


Example 3: Mixer Drive

Given:

  • Required mixing power: 3.7 kW
  • Required mixer speed: 65 RPM
  • Motor: 4-pole, 1,450 RPM
  • Operating: 8 hours/day, high-viscosity fluid
  • Direct coupling (no belt/chain)

Step 1: Output torque

T₂ = 3.7 × 9,550 / 65 = 543 Nm

Step 2: Ratio

i = 1,450 / 65 = 22.3 → use 23.83:1
n₂_actual = 1,450 / 23.83 = 60.8 RPM

Note: 60.8 vs required 65 RPM — difference of 6.5%. For mixing applications this is typically acceptable. If exact speed critical, use VFD.

Step 3: Service factor

  • High viscosity mixer, 8 hours/day → f_s = 1.75
T_design = 543 × 1.75 = 950 Nm

Step 4: Frame size

  • Required: 950 Nm at 23.83:1
  • R57 rated 750 Nm → 127% utilization ✗
  • R67 rated 1,250 Nm → 76% utilization ✓

Step 5: Motor power

P_required = 543 × 60.8 / (9,550 × 0.95) = 3.64 kW
Add margin: 3.64 / 0.80 = 4.55 kW → select 5.5 kW motor

Step 6: Thermal verification

  • R67 thermal rating: 9.5 kW
  • 5.5 kW < 9.5 kW ✓

Step 7: Overhung load

  • Direct coupling: Overhung load negligible if alignment maintained
  • Verify coupling alignment <0.05mm parallel, <0.08° angular

Result: R67, 23.83:1, 5.5 kW motor


9. Torque Calculation Quick Reference

Complete Calculation Sequence

1. T₂ = F × r          (force × radius)
   or
   T₂ = P × 9,550 / n₂ (power × constant / speed)

2. i = n₁ / n₂          (motor speed / output speed)

3. T_design = T₂ × f_s  (apply service factor)

4. Select frame:
   T_catalog ≥ T_design

5. Verify thermal:
   P_thermal_catalog ≥ P_motor_input

6. F_radial = 2.5 × (T_design / r)
   F_radial ≤ F_catalog_at_actual_distance

7. P_motor = T₂ × n₂ / (9,550 × η)
   Select next standard size above calculated

Unit Conversions Reference

ConvertFormula
kW to Nm at RPMT = P × 9,550 / n
Nm to kW at RPMP = T × n / 9,550
HP to kWkW = HP × 0.746
kW to HPHP = kW / 0.746
in-lbs to NmNm = in-lbs × 0.113
ft-lbs to NmNm = ft-lbs × 1.356
RPM to rad/sω = RPM × π / 30

Service Factor Quick-Select

ApplicationQuick Service Factor
Light conveyor, <8 hrs1.25
Standard conveyor, 8-16 hrs1.50
Heavy conveyor, >16 hrs1.75
Chain conveyor, >16 hrs2.00
Reversing + chain + >16 hrs2.50
Screw conveyor, continuous2.25

Efficiency Values for Calculation

ConfigurationUse for Calculation
R Series, 2-stageη = 0.95
R Series, 3-stageη = 0.93
K Series, helical-bevelη = 0.94
Worm gear, 30:1η = 0.72
Worm gear, 60:1η = 0.62

10. FAQ: Helical Gearbox Torque Calculation


Q: What is the formula for calculating R Series helical gearbox output torque?

The fundamental formula is T₂ = T₁ × i × η, where T₁ is input torque (Nm), i is reduction ratio, and η is gearbox efficiency. For practical selection, calculate required output torque first from the driven load: T₂ = F × r for linear drives (force × radius), or T₂ = P × 9,550 / n₂ for rotary equipment (power × 9,550 ÷ output RPM). Then multiply by service factor to get design torque: T_design = T₂ × f_s. Select a frame size from the catalog where rated torque exceeds T_design.


Q: How does service factor affect torque calculation?

Service factor converts steady-state running torque to design torque — the value actually used for frame size selection. A conveyor running at 400 Nm steady-state with service factor 2.0 requires a gearbox rated for 800 Nm. Skipping service factor and selecting on 400 Nm produces a gearbox that appears correctly sized but is actually undersized by 2× for the real dynamic loads. Service factor accounts for starting torque spikes (1.5-2.5× running), shock loads, reversing inertia, and cyclic loading. It is not conservative over-engineering — it reflects the real difference between steady-state calculations and actual operating loads.


Q: What is the difference between running torque and design torque?

Running torque (T₂) is the calculated steady-state torque required by the driven equipment under normal operating conditions. Design torque (T_design) is running torque multiplied by service factor: T_design = T₂ × f_s. Design torque is the value used to select gearbox frame size from the catalog. Running torque is used to calculate motor power requirements. The two values can differ significantly — a service factor of 2.0 doubles the torque requirement for frame size selection while motor power remains based on running torque.


Q: Why is the simplified overhung load formula F = T/r inaccurate?

F = T/r calculates only the tight-side belt tension — the force transmitting torque. It ignores the slack-side tension, which also acts as radial load on the shaft. For a typical belt drive with T1/T2 ratio of 2:1, the slack side adds another 50% to the tight-side force, giving total radial load of approximately 3× the simplified calculation. In practice, engineers use F = 2.0 to 2.5 × (T/r) for belt drives to account for both belt tensions and dynamic loading effects. Using the simplified formula consistently underestimates overhung load by 2-3×, leading to premature bearing failure even when the gearbox appears correctly sized for torque.


Q: How do I calculate torque for an inclined conveyor?

Include the gravity component in the resistance force calculation: F = (m_load + m_belt) × g × (μ × cosθ + sinθ). The sinθ term accounts for the gravitational force component along the incline. At 10° inclination (sin10° = 0.174), gravity adds 17.4% to the horizontal friction force. At 20° (sin20° = 0.342), gravity adds 34.2%. For steep inclines, the gravity term dominates and the friction term becomes secondary. Multiply the resulting torque by an appropriate service factor — inclined conveyors typically require f_s = 1.75-2.25 depending on duty cycle and load characteristics.


Q: What efficiency value should I use for R Series torque calculations?

Use η = 0.95 for 2-stage R Series (ratios 3.66:1 to approximately 20:1) and η = 0.93 for 3-stage R Series (ratios 20:1 to 74.84:1) as conservative design values. These are slightly below the manufacturer’s peak efficiency specifications (94-96% and 93-95% respectively) to account for operating conditions below optimal load, temperature effects, and lubricant aging. Using conservative efficiency values ensures motor sizing is adequate and thermal calculations are not optimistic. Actual efficiency at 50-80% load with fresh synthetic oil will be at the upper end of the specified range.


Q: How do I calculate required motor power for an R Series gearbox?

Calculate required motor input power as: P_motor = (T₂ × n₂) / (9,550 × η), where T₂ is output torque (Nm), n₂ is output speed (RPM), and η is gearbox efficiency. Then select the next standard motor size above this calculated value, with minimum 20% margin: P_selected ≥ 1.20 × P_calculated. The margin accounts for motor efficiency (not 100%), starting current effects, and load variations above steady-state. Never select a motor at exactly the calculated power requirement — motors operating continuously at 100% load run hot, have shortened insulation life, and trip on minor load spikes.


Q: Can I use the same torque calculation method for all R Series gearbox sizes?

Yes — the torque calculation method is identical across all R Series frame sizes from R17 (85 Nm max) to R137 (18,000 Nm max). The formulas T₂ = F × r, T_design = T₂ × f_s, and F_radial = 2.5 × (T/r) apply regardless of frame size. The only differences are the catalog values you verify against — rated torque, thermal power rating, and overhung load capacity — which scale with frame size. The calculation procedure is the same whether you are selecting an R17 for a small packaging drive or an R137 for a heavy mining conveyor.


Q: What causes the most torque calculation errors in practice?

Three errors account for the majority of R Series gearbox failures caused by incorrect specification. First, skipping or underestimating service factor — selecting on running torque without multiplying by f_s. Second, using the simplified overhung load formula F = T/r instead of F = 2.0-2.5 × (T/r), which underestimates radial shaft load by 2-3×. Third, ignoring thermal rating for continuous-duty applications — selecting on mechanical torque rating while overlooking the thermal power limit that governs continuous operation above 12 hours per day. Correcting these three points eliminates the majority of gearbox selection failures.

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