Belt & Chain Drive Systems
V-belt drives, synchronous belts, chain drives, slippage causes, elongation limits, and drive maintenance.
- Select and tension V-belt drives correctly
- Maintain synchronous and timing belt systems
- Diagnose chain elongation and determine replacement timing
Lección 1
V-Belt Drives & Slippage Prevention
V-Belt Fundamentals
V-belts transmit power through friction between the belt and the sheave (pulley) grooves. The V-shape wedges into the groove, increasing the contact area and friction force.
Causes of Excessive Slippage
- Under-tension - insufficient friction to transmit load
- Worn sheave grooves - belt rides low, reduced contact area
- Oil or grease on belt surfaces - reduces friction coefficient
- Overloaded drive - load exceeds belt capacity
- Worn or stretched belts - reduced cross-section area
Tension Verification
The standard method is the deflection method: press the belt midspan with a force gauge. Proper deflection is typically 1/64 inch per inch of span for standard V-belts.
Replace All Belts in a Set
On multi-belt drives, always replace all belts as a matched set. New and old belts have different lengths due to stretching, causing uneven load distribution and premature failure of the new belt.
V-belts transmit power through friction in sheave grooves. Normal slip rate is 3-5%. Check tension with the deflection method. Always replace belts as matched sets on multi-belt drives. Belt should never bottom out in the sheave groove.