Worm Gear Efficiency Calculator: Ratio, Torque & Self-Locking

Worm Gear Efficiency Calculator — Ratio, Output Torque & Self-Locking Check

Calculate worm gear ratio (single or multi-start), output torque accounting for efficiency losses, and check whether the gear set is self-locking.

Quick Answer

For a 4-start worm driving a 40-tooth worm gear at 30° lead angle, 100 Nm input torque: Ratio = 10:1, Efficiency ≈ 85%, Output Torque ≈ 850 Nm, and Not self-locking (lead angle > friction angle). Use the calculator with your parameters.

How Worm Gear Calculations Work

Worm gears achieve massive reduction in a single stage — but at a cost: efficiency. Here’s the science:

1. Worm Gear Ratio

Ratio = Z_g / Z_w, where Z_g = worm gear teeth, Z_w = number of worm starts (threads). A single-start worm with a 60-tooth gear = 60:1. A 4-start worm with the same gear = 15:1. More starts = lower ratio, higher efficiency, but less self-locking.

2. Efficiency

η = tan(λ) / tan(λ + φ), where λ = worm lead angle, φ = friction angle (arctan of coefficient of friction). This is why efficiency drops as ratio increases — higher ratio means smaller lead angle. Single-start worms can be as low as 35% efficient.

3. Self-Locking Condition

A worm gear is self-locking when λ ≤ φ (lead angle ≤ friction angle). This means you can’t back-drive the gear — the worm holds position even without a brake. Critical for hoists, elevators, and lifts where safety depends on it.

Application Examples

  • Elevator and lift hoist mechanisms (self-locking required)
  • Conveyor head drives needing high reduction in one stage
  • Rotary table indexing for machine tools
  • Tuning pegs on string instruments (compact, self-locking)
  • Steering gearboxes on heavy vehicles

Common Mistakes

  • Assuming all worm gears are self-locking — Multi-start worms (>2 starts) lose self-locking. A 4-start worm at 25° lead angle will absolutely back-drive. Don’t bet safety on it.
  • Ignoring efficiency at high ratios — A 60:1 worm set might be only 40% efficient. That means 60% of input power becomes heat. You need cooling or oversized motor.
  • Using wrong friction coefficient — Steel worm + bronze gear: μ ≈ 0.04-0.06 (well-lubricated). Steel + cast iron: μ ≈ 0.08-0.10. The difference doubles your efficiency calculation.
  • Forgetting break-in wear — New worm sets are 5-8% less efficient. After 50-100 hours of break-in, efficiency improves as surfaces polish. Design for post-break-in performance.
  • Not checking thermal capacity — At <50% efficiency, a 10 kW input dumps 5+ kW as heat into the gearbox. Without cooling fins or fan, you'll cook the oil in 30 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my worm gear is self-locking?

If the worm lead angle is less than the friction angle, it self-locks. In practice: single-start worms with ratios >30:1 are generally self-locking. Double-start: borderline. Triple-start or higher: not self-locking. Our calculator checks this automatically.

Why is worm gear efficiency so much lower than spur gears?

Spur gears have rolling contact. Worm gears have sliding contact — the worm thread slides across the gear tooth face. Sliding friction generates heat. The efficiency formula tan(λ)/tan(λ+φ) comes directly from this sliding action physics.

What is the maximum single-stage worm gear ratio?

Practical maximum is 100:1. Above that, the lead angle is so small that efficiency drops below 20% and the gear can’t transmit useful power. For higher ratios, use two-stage. See our Gear Ratio Calculator for multi-stage designs.

Can worm gears transmit motion in reverse?

Only if not self-locking and designed for it. Reverse-driving wears the gear quickly because the gear tooth now drives the worm — sliding contact direction reverses. Special “reversing worm” designs exist but are rare.

What oil should I use for worm gears?

ISO VG 460-680 gear oil with EP (extreme pressure) additives for steel-bronze pairs. The thick oil maintains film strength under sliding contact. For food-grade applications, use synthetic PAO oils. Our Hydraulic Pump Calculator covers lubrication system sizing.

How do I calculate output torque correctly?

T_out = T_in × Ratio × η. Don’t forget the efficiency factor! At 40% efficiency and 60:1 ratio, you get 60 × 0.4 = 24× torque multiplication — not 60×. This is the number one reason worm gear drives are undersized.

What materials for worm and gear?

Worm: hardened and ground steel (case-hardened 8620 or through-hardened 4140). Gear: centrifugally cast bronze (C93200 or C95400). The dissimilar metals reduce galling. Cast iron gear is cheaper but only for low-speed, low-load applications.

How does temperature affect worm gear performance?

Rising temperature drops oil viscosity → thinner film → more metal contact → more heat. Thermal runaway. Above 90°C oil temperature, efficiency can drop 15-20%. Active cooling (fan, water jacket) is mandatory above 5 kW continuous.

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