Conveyor Speed Calculator for Belt Systems

Line Speed Planner

Conveyor Speed Calculator

Find required belt speed or actual throughput for grain, feed, fertilizer, sand, mulch, and other bulk material runs. Test presets, then fine tune the line.

📌Preset Conveyor Runs

Pick a real setup first. Each preset sets material, width, speed, length, lift, trough, fill factor, and buffer for a common farm conveyor.

Calculator Inputs
How it works: the calculator estimates cross-section from belt width and trough angle, then applies material density, incline derating, duty class, and your buffer to solve speed or throughput.

This calculator is tuned for agricultural and yard conveyors, so it prioritizes flow, density, lift, and pulley speed instead of cost or purchase guidance.

Conveyor Output

Estimated belt speed, throughput, belt loading, and pulley demand from the settings above.

Required Speed
0
0
Buffered Throughput
0
0
Belt Load
0
0
Pulley RPM
0
0
Calculation breakdown
Material-
Bulk density-
Duty class-
Pitch and fill-
Cross-section-
Slope factor-
Gross flow-
Buffered flow-
Flight loading-
Empty belt mass-
Drive force-
Line travel time-
Shift total-
Efficiency and margin-
📋Speed Profiles
Corn1.9 m/s~375 fpm, 45 lb/ft³
Wheat1.8 m/s~355 fpm, 48 lb/ft³
Soybeans1.7 m/s~335 fpm, 47 lb/ft³
Feed pellets1.6 m/s~315 fpm, 40 lb/ft³
Fertilizer1.5 m/s~295 fpm, 69 lb/ft³
Wood chips1.4 m/s~275 fpm, 24 lb/ft³
Sand1.2 m/s~235 fpm, 100 lb/ft³
Gravel1.0 m/s~200 fpm, 109 lb/ft³
📈Speed by Width
Belt width Typical speed Common flow Best fit
18 in300-375 fpm35-55 st/hSeed line
24 in325-410 fpm55-85 st/hBin unload
30 in350-455 fpm85-120 st/hFeed run
36 in375-500 fpm120-175 st/hBulk yard
💾Density and Derate
Material lb/ft³ kg/m³ Speed note
Corn45721Balanced flow
Wheat48770Slightly slower
Feed pellets40641Gentle handling
Fertilizer691106Cut speed a bit
Wood chips24385Longer load zone
Sand1001602Use lower speed
Gravel1091748Heavy drag load
Soybeans47752Round seed flow
🛠Pulley and Travel Guide
Pulley At 2 m/s Lap time Note
12 in318 rpm1.9 minFast feed
16 in239 rpm2.6 minBalanced run
20 in191 rpm3.2 minGentle load
24 in159 rpm3.8 minSlow bulk
📆Common Conveyor Jobs
Job Width Speed band Use case
Seed line18 in300-360 fpmGentle seed
Bin unload24 in330-410 fpmGrain flow
Feed mill30 in360-450 fpmMixed feed
Bulk yard36 in380-500 fpmHeavy move
Tip: If the line climbs steeply, var the calculator choose the speed first, then compare buffered throughput to your target rate.
Tip: A wider belt is not always faster. Width, trough angle, fill, and density work together to set the real belt speed window.

Conveyor belt speed is a measurement of how fast a conveyor belt moves. Conveyor belt speed is a critical piece of information in calculating the throughput of the conveyor belt system. Should a person set the conveyor belt speed to move at too slow of a rate, the material will back up on the conveyor belt system, and the unloading schedule will be delayed.

Alternatively, should a person set the conveyor belt to move at too fast of a speed, the material may be damaged on the conveyor belt system. Throughput is the amount of material that pass over a conveyor belt in a specific amount of time. The throughput of a conveyor belt system depend upon the speed of the conveyor belt, the density of the material to be transported, and the fill level of the conveyor belt system.

Conveyor Belt Speed and What Affects It

The shape of the conveyor belt system will impact the amount of material that it can hold. The most common shape of a conveyor belt system is a V-shaped trough. A V-shape trough is often inclined at a 35-degree angle.

This angle allow the conveyor belt system to hold the material in place, so that the material will not spill off of the sides of the conveyor belt system. The fill level of a conveyor belt system is the percentage of the V-shaped trough that is filled with material. For most conveyor belt systems, the target fill level of the trough is between 75 percent of its capacity.

The different type of materials that the conveyor belt system will transport require different speeds of the conveyor belt. For instance, wood chips are a light material, and require a slower conveyor belt speed so that the material does not spill off of the conveyor belt system. Gravel, on the other hand, is a heavy material, and will require an even slower conveyor belt speed for the same reasons that light materials require slower conveyors.

The incline of the conveyor belt system will impact the throughput of the system. If the conveyor belt system have an incline, gravity will work against the movement of the material on the belt system. Thus, if a person increases the rise of the conveyor belt system, the friction created between the belt and the material, as well as the gravitational force against the movement of the materials will decrease the throughput of the system.

Therefore, a person cannot use the same speed of a conveyor belt for flat conveyor belts as inclined conveyor belts. In order to calculate the appropriate speed of a conveyor belt system, a person can use the density of the material that the conveyor belt system will move. For instance, if a person wants to move 60 short tons of material per hour through a conveyor belt system, the person can calculate the appropriate conveyor belt speed by using the known density of the material.

In addition to the density of the material, a person should also factor in a buffer into these calculations. For example, creating a 10 percent buffer will allow for the conveyor belt system to still reach the target throughput in the hour despite variations in the density of the material. Additionally, the pounds of the material per foot of the conveyor system will factor into the calculations of the required belt speed because it will allow the person to determine whether the drive motor for the conveyor belt is capable of move the load.

The width of the conveyor belt will impact the capacity of the system, but the width of the belt does not necessarily impact the speed of the conveyor belt system. For instance, an 18-inch conveyor belt system may move between 300 and 375 feet of material per minute, while a 36-inch conveyor belt system can move between 375 and 500 feet of material per minute. Thus, the relationship between the width of the conveyor belt system and the speed at which it moves is not linear; if the width of the belt is changed, the person must recalculate the speed of the belt.

Many different individuals in a facility may manage conveyor belt systems. These individuals may make many mistakes with these systems. For instance, they may not account for the incline of the conveyor belt if they had set the speed of the conveyor belt for a flat conveyor belt.

Additionally, those who overloading the conveyor belt system by exceeding 85 percent of the V-shaped trough of the system may experience problems with the system. Finally, those who believe that all grains have the same rate of movement on conveyor belts do not account for difference in the densities of materials like soybeans and corn; therefore, soybeans will require a different speed of conveyor belt than corn. Finally, the size of the pulley that a conveyor belt system uses will impact the reliability of that system.

Small pulleys have a small diameter. Thus, the small pulley will need to spin at a high number of revolutions per minute in order to move the conveyor belt. For instance, a 12-inch pulley will spin at a high rate of revolutions per minute compared to a 20-inch pulley.

The larger the diameter of the pulley, the more slower the pulley will spin. Larger pulleys will provide less stress on the drive motors and the bearings of the conveyor belt system. Finally, vibrations and heat are two indicators of the reliability of the system.

Vibrations indicate that the conveyor belt is unbalance, while heat within the pulleys indicates that there is friction between the two moving components.

Conveyor Speed Calculator for Belt Systems

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