Mangle Wheel Mechanism: How It Works, Diagram, Parts, Formula and Uses Explained

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A Mangle Wheel is a gear with teeth or pins arranged on a single face in a closed loop, driven by a pinion that walks the loop and reverses direction at each end — converting continuous rotary input into alternating rotary or reciprocating motion. Early Victorian laundry mangles used it to drive the roller back and forth from one hand-crank input. The purpose is to eliminate a separate reversing mechanism. The outcome is a compact, low-cost reversal drive that runs from a single-direction prime mover.

Mangle Wheel Interactive Calculator

Vary pinion speed, tooth count, arc pin count, and sweep angle to see the mangle wheel stroke rate, cycle time, and oscillating motion.

Stroke Rate
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Cycle Time
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Output Speed
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Pinion Rev/Stroke
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Equation Used

strokes_per_min = n_pinion * z / N_sweep; cycle_time = 120 / strokes_per_min; avg_output_speed = theta * strokes_per_min / 60

The calculator treats each pinion tooth as one pitch advance along the mangle wheel pin track. If the pinion has z teeth and runs at n rpm, it makes n*z tooth engagements per minute. Dividing by the number of pins along one sweep gives the forward or return stroke rate. A full cycle is two strokes.

  • One pinion tooth engagement advances one pin pitch on the mangle track.
  • Pins per sweep are counted along one forward or return arc.
  • Forward and return sweeps use the same pin count and sweep angle.
  • Crossover dwell, backlash, and acceleration are neglected for average kinematics.
Watch the Mangle Wheel in motion
Video: Sector wheel baling press by Nguyen Duc Thang (thang010146) on YouTube. Used here to complement the diagram below.
Mangle Wheel Mechanism Animated diagram showing a mangle wheel mechanism where a pinion gear walks around a closed loop of pins on a wheel face, shifting radially at crossover points to convert continuous rotation into oscillating output motion. Outer Arc Inner Arc Crossover Driving Pinion Carrier Arm Pivot Wheel Face Legend Pinion (animated) Pinion shifts radially at crossovers Reverses direction without separate mechanism
Mangle Wheel Mechanism.

How the Mangle Wheel Works

The Mangle Wheel, also called the Mangle Machine Gear in older textile catalogues and the Mangle Wheel Gear in machine-tool literature, works by laying tooth pins in a closed-curve track on the face of a disc rather than around its rim. A pinion meshes with these pins. The pinion shaft is mounted so it can shift radially — usually on a swinging arm or a sliding block in a slot — so when the pinion reaches the inner end of the track it gets pushed outward to the return path, and vice versa. One full rotation of the input pinion no longer corresponds to one full rotation of the wheel. The wheel instead oscillates, completing a forward sweep, reversing, and sweeping back.

The geometry decides everything. If the pin spacing varies between the inner and outer arcs, you get a Mangle-wheel (uniform speed) layout where pin pitch is corrected so the output angular velocity stays constant across the sweep — critical in textile mangles where uneven roller speed leaves wet streaks in the linen. If you simplify and use equal pin spacing, you get the basic Mangle wheel (form) layout where the wheel speeds up and slows down through the reversal, which is fine for crude reciprocating drives but unacceptable for finishing machines. The Mangle-wheel and pinion pair must be cut to matching pitch — get the pinion module wrong by even 0.2 mm and the pinion either jams at the crossover or skips a pin, both of which destroy the wheel face within hours.

The most common failure is at the crossover point. The pinion has to leave the outer track, traverse a curved transition, and engage the inner track. If the swinging-arm pivot has slop above about 0.3 mm radial, the pinion enters the transition off-axis and chips a pin. You'll hear it as a sharp tick once per reversal before the pin breaks off entirely. The Mangle/star wheel for alternating rotary motion variant uses a star-shaped pin layout to make this transition smoother, but it costs you uniform output velocity.

Key Components

  • Mangle Wheel Disc: The face plate carrying the pin or tooth track. Typically cast iron 12-25 mm thick for industrial mangles, with pins pressed into 6 mm or 8 mm reamed holes. Hole tolerance is H7 — slip-fit hand-driven, no looser, or pins walk under load.
  • Driving Pinion: The small gear that meshes with the pin track. Cut to the same circular pitch as the pin spacing. For a uniform-speed mangle wheel this means a single pinion that fits both the inner and outer arc pitches — only possible because the pinion teeth are radial and the wheel pitch is corrected, not the pinion.
  • Pinion Carrier Arm: A swinging arm or slotted slide that lets the pinion shift radially between the two arcs. Pivot bushing radial play must stay under 0.3 mm or the pinion mistracks at the crossover. Spring-loaded against a stop on each arc.
  • Crossover Transition Curve: The short arc connecting the inner and outer pin tracks. Pin pitch here is non-uniform by design — the pinion is radially translating during this segment, not just rotating. A poorly cut transition is the single most common reason a Mangle Wheel fails early.
  • Reversal Stops: Hard stops or the geometry of the closed track itself that force the pinion onto the return path. In some designs a separate striker arm flips the carrier arm. Stop impact load can hit 3-5× nominal tooth load, which is why pin pull-out is the second most common failure.

Where the Mangle Wheel Is Used

The Mangle Wheel earned its name from the laundry mangle — the heavy roller press used to wring water out of bedsheets in the 18th and 19th centuries. The operator turned a single crank in one direction, and the Mangle-wheel (with pinion) drove the roller box back and forth across the linen. The same kinematic trick spread quickly to any machine that needed reciprocating motion from a unidirectional input without a clutch or reversing gearbox.

  • Domestic Laundry Equipment: Victorian box mangles built by Baker of London and similar makers used a Mangle wheel (form) to drive the weighted roller box back and forth under hand crank input, pressing linen flat as it travelled.
  • Textile Finishing: Industrial calendering and mangle finishers used Mangle-wheel (uniform speed) drives to ensure constant roller surface velocity across the work, preventing moisture streaks in cotton and linen finishing lines.
  • Machine Tool Tables: Early planing machines and slotting machines used a Mangle Wheel Gear to reciprocate the work table from a continuously rotating shaft, eliminating the need for clutched reversing gears that were expensive to manufacture before standardised gear cutting.
  • Mechanical Toys and Models: Tin wind-up toys from German makers like Märklin used miniature Mangle/star wheel for alternating rotary motion drives to make figures wave or oscillate from a single mainspring.
  • Educational Kinematics: Cornell University's Reuleaux kinematic model collection includes a Mangle Machine Gear demonstrator, showing students how closed-track gearing converts continuous to alternating rotation.
  • Stage Machinery: 19th-century theatre traps and trick scenery used Mangle-wheel and pinion drives to slide platforms in and out from a hand-cranked offstage capstan.

The Formula Behind the Mangle Wheel

The number of input pinion revolutions per one full output cycle (one forward sweep plus one return) is what tells you whether your motor RPM matches the desired reciprocation rate. At the low end of typical input — say 30 RPM on a small classroom demonstrator — the output cycles slowly and the crossover loads stay gentle. At the nominal range of around 60-80 RPM common in tabletop reciprocating mechanisms, the wheel runs smoothly with manageable inertia at reversal. Push past about 120 RPM input on a wheel with 24 pins and reversal shock spikes hard — the pinion carrier arm slams its stop with enough force to chip pins. The sweet spot for most builds is one full output cycle every 1.5-3 seconds, which keeps reversal forces under control while still being visible to an observer.

Np = Zouter + Zinner, and fcycle = RPMin / (60 × Np / zpinion)

Variables

Symbol Meaning Unit (SI) Unit (Imperial)
Np Total pin engagements per full output cycle (sum of pins in outer and inner tracks) count count
Zouter Number of pins on the outer arc count count
Zinner Number of pins on the inner arc count count
zpinion Number of teeth on the driving pinion count count
fcycle Output reciprocation frequency Hz (cycles/s) cycles/s
RPMin Input pinion rotational speed rev/min rev/min

Worked Example: Mangle Wheel in a tabletop reciprocating display drive

You are building a tabletop kinetic display where a slider needs to travel back and forth visibly for a museum demonstration. You've laid out a Mangle Wheel with 16 pins on the outer arc and 12 pins on the inner arc, driven by a 6-tooth pinion. The input shaft comes from a small 12 V gearmotor. You want to know how fast the slider reciprocates and whether your gearmotor speed range is appropriate.

Given

  • Zouter = 16 pins
  • Zinner = 12 pins
  • zpinion = 6 teeth
  • RPMin (nominal) = 60 rev/min

Solution

Step 1 — total pin engagements per output cycle:

Np = 16 + 12 = 28 pins per full cycle

Step 2 — pinion revolutions per output cycle (the pinion engages one pin per tooth pass, so it must turn Np/zpinion revolutions to complete one forward-and-back sweep):

revcycle = 28 / 6 ≈ 4.67 pinion revs per output cycle

Step 3 — at nominal 60 RPM input, the output cycle frequency:

fnom = 60 / (60 × 4.67) = 0.214 Hz, or one full back-and-forth every 4.67 s

That feels like a slow, deliberate sweep — exactly what a museum display wants. At the low end of typical operation, 30 RPM input gives flow ≈ 0.107 Hz, or one cycle every 9.3 seconds. The motion looks almost meditative and the reversal shock is barely audible. Push to 120 RPM input and you get fhigh ≈ 0.428 Hz, one cycle every 2.3 seconds.

fhigh = 120 / (60 × 4.67) ≈ 0.428 Hz

At 120 RPM the reversal stop on the carrier arm starts to clack audibly and you'll see pin-tip wear within 50 hours of running. Above 150 RPM in this geometry the carrier arm bounces off the stop and the pinion mistracks the crossover.

Result

Nominal output is one full reciprocation every 4. 67 seconds, or 0.214 Hz, at 60 RPM input. That's slow enough to read as deliberate motion to a museum visitor and fast enough that nobody assumes the display has stalled. Across the typical operating band the cycle time runs from roughly 9.3 s (gentle, almost too slow) at 30 RPM up to 2.3 s (snappy, with audible reversal clack) at 120 RPM — the sweet spot sits at the 50-70 RPM input mark. If your measured cycle time runs longer than predicted, the most common causes are: (1) pinion teeth slipping on worn pin tips so the pinion advances without driving the wheel, visible as a momentary hesitation at one position each cycle, (2) carrier-arm spring tension too high and stalling the gearmotor at the crossover, or (3) a bent pin in the inner arc creating a hard stop that the gearmotor only overcomes intermittently.

Choosing the Mangle Wheel: Pros and Cons

The Mangle Wheel solves a specific problem: continuous-to-alternating rotary conversion in one component. But it's not the only way. The two practical alternatives — Scotch Yoke and Geneva Drive — share overlapping use cases but have very different speed, accuracy, and reliability profiles. Pick based on your duty cycle and reversal-shock budget, not on which one looks coolest in a textbook.

Property Mangle Wheel Scotch Yoke Geneva Drive
Typical input RPM range 20-150 RPM 0-3000 RPM 10-300 RPM
Output velocity uniformity High with corrected pitch (uniform-speed variant), poor otherwise Sinusoidal — peak at mid-stroke, zero at ends Step motion — output is stationary 60-75% of cycle
Reversal shock at 100 RPM input Moderate — depends on stop design Smooth — sinusoidal deceleration is inherent High — discrete step engagement
Manufacturing complexity High — pin-track geometry must be cut precisely Low — slot and pin only Moderate — driver and star wheel both need careful cutting
Typical service life 5,000-20,000 hours before pin replacement 20,000+ hours, slot wear is gradual 10,000-30,000 hours, depends on lubrication
Best application fit Reciprocating tables, mangle rollers, oscillating drives High-speed pumps, sine-wave actuators Indexing, intermittent advance (film, rotary tables)
Relative cost (small-batch) High — custom pin layout Low — off-the-shelf parts Moderate — semi-standard

Frequently Asked Questions About Mangle Wheel

You've built a basic Mangle wheel (form) with equal pin spacing rather than a corrected uniform-speed layout. Because the inner arc has a smaller radius, the angular velocity of the wheel rises when the pinion is on the inner track and drops on the outer track — the linear pin-passage rate stays constant but the angular rate doesn't. To get constant angular velocity output you need to vary the pin pitch on each arc to cancel the radius difference, which is the Mangle-wheel (uniform speed) variant. For a textile mangle this matters because uneven roller speed leaves moisture streaks. For a museum display, nobody will notice.

The pinion tooth count zpinion must divide cleanly into the pin spacing of both arcs at the crossover, otherwise the pinion enters the transition mid-tooth and chips a pin. In practice this means zpinion needs to be a small integer — 4, 5, or 6 teeth — and the inner and outer pin counts should be even multiples of that integer at the transition zone. A 6-tooth pinion with 12 inner pins and 18 outer pins works cleanly. A 7-tooth pinion with 12 and 16 will jam at the crossover within a few cycles.

Scotch Yoke. A Mangle Wheel above about 150 RPM input starts hammering the carrier-arm stop hard enough that pin-tip wear climbs sharply, and the crossover transition becomes the limiting factor on tooth life. Scotch Yoke decelerates sinusoidally — there is no impact at the reversal points because velocity is already zero by the time the slot reaches its end. Reserve Mangle Wheels for slow, deliberate reciprocation under about 100 RPM input where the visible asymmetric motion is part of the design intent or where you specifically need rotary output rather than linear.

The pinion is hitting the crossover transition off-axis. Two causes account for nearly all cases. First, carrier-arm pivot wear over 0.3 mm radial play lets the pinion drift sideways as it enters the transition curve, so the first pin on the new arc gets struck on its tip rather than its flank. Second, the carrier-arm return spring may be too weak — if the spring doesn't snap the arm fully against its stop before the next pin arrives, the pinion engages the transition at a partial angle. Re-bush the pivot or stiffen the return spring; if the tick persists, the transition arc itself has been worn open and the wheel needs replacement.

Yes, and it actually solves a real problem with mechanical Mangle Wheels — reversal-stop wear. With a stepper you decelerate the input shaft electronically as the pinion approaches the crossover, then accelerate after it has cleared the transition. This drops carrier-arm impact load by 60-80% versus a constant-RPM input and extends pin life accordingly. The catch is you need a position sensor on the wheel itself (a hall sensor on the carrier arm works) because the input-to-output relationship is non-linear through the transition and dead-reckoning step counts will drift after a few hundred cycles.

Hole fit is wrong or pin material is too soft. Pin holes should be reamed to H7 with the pin pressed in as a light interference fit — not slip-fit, not loose. If you used a drilled hole without reaming, hole diameter is typically 0.05-0.10 mm oversized and the pin works loose under reversing load. Second, hardened dowel pins (HRC 58+) outlast mild-steel pins by 10× in this service because tip mushrooming is what actually causes walk-out, not just hole fit. Replace with reamed-hole hardened dowels and the problem disappears.

References & Further Reading

  • Wikipedia contributors. Mangle (machine). Wikipedia

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