When designing a belt drive with an internal combustion (I.C.) engine it’s
important to understand that an IC engine is not like an electric motor. The
horsepower rating for a NEMA motor is not the same as a horsepower rating for
an IC engine. There is no conversion factor. HP is a HP is a HP. Engines just
have different characteristics. Electric motors may have a hard start whereas
IC engine may not. IC engines can’t run at their peak torque for a long time. An
IC Engine with a HP rating higher than the power needed should be selected. Altitude
and other factors can affect an IC engine’s performance.
Internal combustion engines are typically rated based on brake
horsepower (BHP), or maximum BHP.
This BHP rating of an engine usually means the horsepower produced by a
test engine in a laboratory. During the
test an engine is ran without a fan, generator and other accessories. The ambient temperature is corrected to some
standard, such as 60°F., and the atmospheric pressure is corrected to some
given altitude, such as sea level. The
BHP rating should not be used for design, since the standard production engine,
with accessories, cannot reach this output in actual usage. Gross BHP is the term used for test data
without any accessories and net BHP is with all of the standard
accessories. This is the horsepower
measured at the crankshaft flywheel. An
I.C. engine spec will not contain any other mention of horsepower.
Several decades ago it was more common to refer to a maximum intermittent
HP. For short durations this was
generally 85% of BHP. Continuous duty or
rated BHP was 75%-80% of maximum BHP for long duration service. These terms are not referred to today in
engine specifications.
It is still important to verify the horsepower versus engine rpm curves
for those applications where the engine and drive are not intended to run at
one speed continuously. A percent time
duty cycle is also helpful in selecting a belt drive.
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