A simple friction pulley is a smooth-rimmed wheel that transmits torque to a belt or rope purely by surface friction, with no teeth, keys, or positive engagement between the belt and the rim. It solves the problem of moving rotary power from a driver shaft to a driven shaft cheaply and quietly, without the cost or noise of gearing. The belt grips the pulley over its wrap angle, and the difference between tight-side and slack-side tension delivers usable torque. Mill line shafts in 19th-century textile factories ran hundreds of horsepower this way on flat leather belts.
Simple Friction Pulley Interactive Calculator
Vary belt friction, wrap angle, slack-side tension, and pulley radius to see the capstan tension ratio and torque capacity.
Equation Used
The capstan equation gives the maximum tight-side to slack-side tension ratio a belt can hold on a smooth pulley before slipping. Multiplying the resulting tension difference by pulley radius gives the available friction torque.
- Belt is just at the friction limit before slip.
- Wrap angle is converted from degrees to radians.
- T2 is the slack-side belt tension.
- Defaults are illustrative because the provided worked example section states the formula but gives no numeric T2 or radius.
Operating Principle of the Simple Friction Pulley
The whole thing comes down to one fact — friction between the belt and the rim is what does the work. The belt arrives on the slack side at tension T2, wraps around the pulley over an angle θ (the wrap angle), and leaves on the tight side at a higher tension T1. The difference T1 − T2 times the pulley radius is the torque you actually get out. No belt grip, no torque. That is the entire mechanism in one sentence.
Why a smooth rim and not teeth? Because you want forgiveness. A friction pulley will slip before it breaks something. If the driven machine jams, the belt slides on the rim, the operator hears it squeal, and nobody loses a finger or a crankshaft. That is why every line shaft in a 19th-century mill ran flat leather belting on smooth iron pulleys — the slip was the safety system. The trade is that you have to size the wrap angle and the belt tension correctly or the pulley slips when you do not want it to. The capstan equation T1 / T2 = eμθ tells you the maximum tension ratio you can hold before slip, where μ is the coefficient of friction (around 0.25 for leather on cast iron, 0.4 for rubber on steel) and θ is the wrap angle in radians.
Get the tolerances wrong and you see it immediately. Wrap angle below about 120° on the smaller pulley and you lose grip — the belt slips under load even though you have the right belt and the right tension. Crown the pulley wrong (the slight barrel shape on the rim that keeps a flat belt centred) and the belt walks off the side. Run the belt too tight and you cook the shaft bearings; too loose and the belt flaps and slips. The classic failure mode in a working mill was glazed belting — the leather got polished, μ dropped from 0.25 to under 0.15, and the drive started slipping under full mule-spinning load. The fix was to dress the belt with neatsfoot oil or replace it.
Key Components
- Pulley Rim: The smooth cylindrical (or slightly crowned) outer surface that contacts the belt. Cast iron is the traditional choice because the slight surface roughness gives μ around 0.25 with leather. The rim should be machined to a true running surface within about 0.1 mm TIR or the belt will walk and pulse.
- Crown: A subtle barrel-shaped curvature on the rim, typically 1 mm rise across a 150 mm wide face, that self-centres a flat belt. Without crown the belt drifts to one side and falls off. Too much crown and the belt edges fatigue and crack.
- Hub and Bore: The central boss that locks the pulley to the shaft, usually with a parallel key and grub screw or a taper-lock bush. The bore must be a sliding fit on the shaft — H7/h6 — because any eccentricity here shows up as belt pulsation and shaft vibration at running speed.
- Arms or Web: Connects the rim to the hub. Cast iron split-arm pulleys were standard in mills because they could be fitted to a running line shaft without dropping the shaft. A modern equivalent is a steel-disc web pulley, lighter and stiffer for high-speed service.
- Belt: The actual power-transmitting element wrapping the pulley. Flat leather, woven cotton, or modern rubber-fabric composite. Belt thickness, width, and tension set the usable T1 − T2 and therefore the deliverable torque.
Who Uses the Simple Friction Pulley
Friction pulleys still appear in any drive where slip is acceptable or actively useful — line shafts, conveyor head pulleys, capstan winches, machine tool spindle drives, and washing machine drums. The reason is the same one that put them in every cotton mill in Lancashire — they are cheap, quiet, forgiving, and they do not need precise alignment to work. When you need exact phasing, you reach for a toothed belt or a chain. When you just need to move power, a friction pulley with a flat belt or a V-belt is hard to beat.
- Textile Mill Heritage Sites: Line shaft drives at Quarry Bank Mill in Cheshire, where flat leather belting still drives demonstration carding engines and mules off a single overhead shaft turned by the mill's water wheel
- Bulk Materials Handling: Head pulleys on Joy Global trough conveyors at Powder River Basin coal mines, transmitting traction to rubber-textile belts up to 1,800 mm wide via friction alone
- Marine Deck Equipment: Capstan drums on Norwegian fishing vessels using the capstan equation to hold mooring loads of 8,000 kg with only a few turns of rope and a deckhand's hand pull
- Machine Tools: Spindle drives on Bridgeport Series 1 milling machines, where a stepped flat-belt-and-pulley arrangement delivers spindle speed changes without gear noise
- Domestic Appliances: Drum drives on Whirlpool top-load washing machines, where a single rubber V-belt and a smooth motor pulley transmit torque to a large drum pulley with deliberate slip protection during agitation
- Agricultural Machinery: Threshing drum drives on vintage Case IH combines, where a long flat belt off the engine pulley powers the drum and slips harmlessly if the drum jams on a wet sheaf
The Formula Behind the Simple Friction Pulley
The capstan equation tells you the maximum ratio of tight-side to slack-side belt tension a friction pulley can sustain before the belt slips on the rim. That ratio sets the deliverable torque. At the low end of the typical mill range — wrap angle 120°, μ around 0.20 for slightly glazed leather — you only get a tension ratio of about 1.52, which means barely a third of the belt's working tension shows up as useful pull. At a healthy nominal — 180° wrap, μ = 0.25 fresh leather on iron — the ratio jumps to about 2.19. Push to 270° wrap with a tensioner idler and good rubber belt at μ = 0.40 and the ratio reaches 6.59, which is why crowned-rim conveyor head pulleys with snub idlers can deliver enormous traction without the belt walking off.
Variables
| Symbol | Meaning | Unit (SI) | Unit (Imperial) |
|---|---|---|---|
| T1 | Tight-side belt tension entering the pulley | N | lbf |
| T2 | Slack-side belt tension leaving the pulley | N | lbf |
| μ | Coefficient of friction between belt and pulley surface | dimensionless | dimensionless |
| θ | Wrap angle of belt around the pulley | rad | rad |
Worked Example: Simple Friction Pulley in a heritage flour mill line shaft drive
A working stone-ground flour mill in Brittany is recommissioning the main line shaft drive between the water turbine and the millstone hurst frame, using a 200 mm wide oak-tanned leather flat belt running on a 600 mm diameter cast iron driving pulley. The drive must deliver 12 kW at 240 RPM to the millstone gear without belt slip. The slack-side tension has been pre-set with a hanging tensioner to T2 = 800 N, the wrap angle on the driving pulley measures 165°, and μ for fresh oak-tanned leather on machined cast iron is taken as 0.25.
Given
- P = 12 kW
- N = 240 RPM
- D = 0.600 m
- T2 = 800 N
- θ = 165° = 2.880 rad
- μ = 0.25 —
Solution
Step 1 — work out the tension ratio the capstan equation allows at the nominal μ = 0.25 and θ = 2.880 rad:
So with T2 = 800 N pre-set on the slack side, the tight side can hold up to T1 = 2.054 × 800 = 1,643 N before slip. The available pulling force is T1 − T2 = 843 N.
Step 2 — work out what pulling force you actually need at the rim to deliver 12 kW at 240 RPM:
Freq = P / vrim = 12,000 / 7.54 = 1,591 N
That is a problem. You need 1,591 N of net belt pull, but the friction pulley at 165° wrap and fresh-leather μ = 0.25 only gives you 843 N. The belt will slip under full water turbine load on day one.
Step 3 — explore the operating range. At the low end of realistic mill conditions, leather glazes after a few months of service and μ drops to about 0.18:
Favail,low = (1.677 − 1) × 800 = 542 N
That is barely a third of what the drive needs — the belt slips, squeals, and overheats. At the high end, fit a snub idler to lift the wrap angle to 220° (3.840 rad) and dress the belt with neatsfoot oil to bring μ back to 0.30:
Favail,high = (3.165 − 1) × 800 = 1,732 N
That clears the 1,591 N requirement with a small margin. Or you raise T2 to 1,200 N with a heavier tensioner — same result.
Result
At the nominal 165° wrap and fresh-leather μ = 0. 25, the friction pulley delivers 843 N of net belt pull, which is well short of the 1,591 N the 12 kW drive demands — the belt will slip under load. In practice that means you hear a steady chirp and squeal as the turbine comes up to speed, the belt feels warm to the back of the hand within minutes, and millstone speed sags below 240 RPM whenever the grain feed deepens. Across the operating range the picture is stark — glazed belt at μ = 0.18 only delivers 542 N (drive completely unusable), nominal is borderline, and only the upgraded 220° wrap with dressed belt at μ = 0.30 clears the requirement at 1,732 N. If your measured slip is worse than the model predicts the usual culprits are: (1) belt joint thickness — a laced or wire-hook joint locally lifts the belt off the rim and drops effective wrap by 10-15°, (2) pulley face contamination with flour dust mixed with lubricating oil from the shaft bearings, which can drop μ to 0.10 overnight, or (3) shaft misalignment over 1.5 mm per metre, which makes the belt ride one edge of the crown and reduces effective contact width.
When to Use a Simple Friction Pulley and When Not To
A friction pulley is the cheapest, quietest way to move rotary power, but the moment you need exact phasing or zero slip you have to look elsewhere. Here is how it stacks up against the two obvious alternatives — a toothed timing belt pulley, and a roller chain sprocket.
| Property | Simple Friction Pulley | Timing Belt Pulley | Roller Chain Sprocket |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maximum continuous speed | Up to 35 m/s rim speed (well-balanced cast iron) | Up to 60 m/s with reinforced HTD belt | Typically under 15 m/s before chain whip |
| Slip behaviour | Slips under overload — acts as built-in safety clutch | No slip until tooth jump or belt failure | No slip until chain breakage |
| Phase accuracy | None — slips ~1-2% under load | Exact tooth-by-tooth synchronisation | Exact tooth-by-tooth synchronisation |
| Typical efficiency | 94-96% with fresh belt, drops to 85% glazed | 97-99% | 96-98% lubricated, 92% dry |
| Noise level | Quietest — 60-70 dB at industrial speed | Mid — tooth meshing whine 75-85 dB | Loudest — 85-95 dB |
| Initial cost (pulley + belt) | Lowest — plain cast iron and flat belt | 2-4× friction pulley cost | 1.5-3× friction pulley cost |
| Service life of belt/chain element | 3-10 years leather, 5-15 years rubber-fabric | 10,000-25,000 hours | 8,000-15,000 hours with oil bath |
| Best application fit | Line shafts, conveyors, washing machines, capstans | CNC axes, camshaft drives, robotics | Motorcycles, bicycles, heavy machinery final drives |
Frequently Asked Questions About Simple Friction Pulley
Mark a chalk line across the belt and across the pulley rim while the drive is stopped. Run it under load and watch the chalk marks. If they stay aligned and the system still slows down, the prime mover is the limit. If the belt mark advances around the pulley faster than the rim mark, you have slip — and slip more than about 2% means you are well below your design tension ratio.
The reason this matters is that slip wastes energy as heat in the belt-rim interface. A belt running at 5% slip can lose 5% of input power as friction heat, which both cooks the leather and accelerates glazing — so slip causes more slip, and the problem runs away from you.
The capstan equation does not depend on absolute tension — only on the ratio T1/T2. Once you have enough total tension that T2 is well above the working pull, adding more does nothing for grip. What it does do is load up the shaft bearings, which see roughly 2 × (T1 + T2) as a side load.
Rule of thumb on a flat belt mill drive — T2 should be about 1.5× the calculated minimum to handle starting transients, and no more. Beyond that you are buying bearing wear and shaft bending, not belt grip. If you find yourself cranking the tensioner harder and harder to stop slip, the real fix is more wrap angle or a higher-μ belt.
V-belts effectively multiply the coefficient of friction by 1/sin(α/2), where α is the groove angle — usually 38-40°. That gives an effective μ of roughly 0.75 from a real μ of 0.25, which means a V-belt grips far better than a flat belt at the same wrap angle and the same physical tension.
So choose V over flat when shaft centres are short (which limits wrap angle), when you cannot fit a tensioner idler, or when you need compact, high-torque transmission like a machine tool spindle drive. Stay with flat belts when shaft centres are long, when you want the cheapest possible installation, or when you need the safety of clean, predictable slip under overload — for example on long conveyors and heritage line shafts.
Most belt-tracking problems are not pure parallelism issues — they are crown issues. A flat belt centres itself on the highest point of the pulley face, so if the crown has worn flat, or the pulley is mounted upside-down on a single-sided crown, or the two pulleys in the drive have different crown profiles, the belt will drift to whichever side has the higher contact point.
Check three things in order: (1) measure the crown with a straightedge across the rim — you want roughly 1 mm of rise per 150 mm of face width, (2) verify the belt is not running off-centre because of a flange or guide rubbing, and (3) only then start checking shaft parallelism with a string line. Most heritage mill mechanics fix tracking with a hammer and a shim under the bearing pedestal, adjusting tilt by a fraction of a degree until the belt sits dead-centre.
You size for peak torque, not average torque, then add a service factor. A reciprocating pump can demand 2-3× its average torque at the bottom of the suction stroke. A reciprocating saw can spike to 4× when the blade hits a knot. If you size the friction pulley for average power, the belt will slip on every peak, glaze rapidly, and fail in months instead of years.
Use a service factor of 1.4 for steady loads (centrifugal pumps, fans), 1.6 for light shock (reciprocating pumps), and 2.0+ for heavy shock (rock crushers, sawmill arbours). Multiply your calculated continuous power by that factor before you compute the required tension ratio. The slip-as-safety behaviour of a friction pulley is only useful at genuine overload — not on every working stroke.
Two reasons. First, the capstan equation assumes the belt is a perfectly flexible, massless string — real belts have bending stiffness, so beyond about 240° of wrap the inner fibres of the belt go into compression and the outer fibres see tension peaks that fatigue them. You gain a little grip but spend it on belt life.
Second, beyond about 220° of wrap you start to need two snub idlers, which add bearings, alignment problems, and noise. Every conveyor designer eventually finds that the marginal grip from going past 240° is not worth the mechanical complexity. The smarter move at high traction demand is a lagged pulley — a rubber or ceramic-tile coating on the rim that raises μ from 0.25 (steel-on-rubber-belt) to 0.45 or higher.
References & Further Reading
- Wikipedia contributors. Capstan equation. Wikipedia
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