Classical V-belts are the original and most widely installed V-belt type in industrial power transmission. They use a trapezoidal (wedge-shaped) cross section wrapped in a rubberized fabric cover, with internal tensile cords that carry the load and a compression section that wedges into the sheave groove. Classical V-belts are designated by section letters A through E, with each letter representing a specific top width and depth combination that matches a corresponding sheave groove size.
Texas Belting stocks classical V-belts in all five standard sections from Gates, Continental, Bando, and Diesel Belting. A and B sections are the most commonly stocked sizes. Same-day shipping on stocked lengths from our Houston warehouse.
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Classical V-Belt Cross Section Dimensions
Each section letter defines the belt's top width and depth. These dimensions determine which sheave groove the belt fits. A belt and sheave must be the same section to work together.
| Section | Top Width | Depth | HP Range | Min. Sheave OD | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1/2" (12.7 mm) | 5/16" (8 mm) | 1/4 to 10 HP | 3.0" | Light to medium duty: small pumps, fans, compressors, shop equipment, light conveyors |
| B | 5/8" (16 mm) | 13/32" (10.5 mm) | 1 to 25 HP | 5.4" | General industrial: HVAC, agriculture, medium compressors, blowers, most common section |
| C | 7/8" (22 mm) | 17/32" (13.5 mm) | 15 to 100 HP | 9.0" | Heavy duty: large compressors, blowers, crushers, industrial fans, heavy conveyors |
| D | 1-1/4" (32 mm) | 3/4" (19 mm) | 50 to 250 HP | 13.0" | Very heavy duty: mining, large pumps, industrial blowers, steel processing |
| E | 1-1/2" (38 mm) | 1" (25.4 mm) | 100 to 500+ HP | 21.6" | Maximum duty: mining, large industrial, power generation, heavy processing |
How to Read a Classical V-Belt Part Number
Classical V-belt part numbers encode the section letter and the inside length in inches.
| Part Number | Section | Inside Length | How to Calculate |
|---|---|---|---|
| A68 | A | 68" | OC (70") minus 2 = 68 |
| B100 | B | 100" | OC (103") minus 3 = 100 |
| C120 | C | 120" | OC (124") minus 4 = 120 |
| D240 | D | 240" | OC (245") minus 5 = 240 |
| E360 | E | 360" | OC (367") minus 7 = 360 |
How it works: Measure the outside circumference (OC) of the belt by wrapping a tape around the outer (top) surface. Subtract the conversion factor for your section to get the inside length, which is the number in the part number. The conversion factors are: A = subtract 2, B = subtract 3, C = subtract 4, D = subtract 5, E = subtract 7.
Classical (Wrapped) vs. Cogged: Upgrade Path
Every classical V-belt section has a cogged equivalent that uses the same sheave groove and is a direct drop-in replacement. Cogged belts are designated with an "X" suffix: AX, BX, CX.
| Feature | Classical (Wrapped) | Cogged (AX, BX, CX) |
|---|---|---|
| Construction | Fabric cover envelopes entire belt | Raw rubber sidewalls, molded notches on underside |
| Flexibility | Standard | Higher. Cogs reduce bending resistance. |
| Heat dissipation | Standard | Better. More exposed surface area. |
| Efficiency | 94-96% | Up to 2% higher (reduced bending loss) |
| Service life | Standard | Typically 20-30% longer on high-speed or small-sheave drives |
| Small sheave capability | Limited by minimum sheave OD | Handles smaller sheaves than wrapped |
| Cost | Lower | Slightly higher (offset by longer life) |
| Sheave compatibility | Standard groove | Same groove. Direct replacement. |
If your drive runs at high speed, uses sheaves near the minimum diameter, or operates in elevated temperatures, upgrading from classical wrapped to cogged V-belts is a straightforward way to improve belt life and efficiency with no sheave changes.
Classical vs. Narrow Wedge: When to Consider Upgrading
Classical V-belts (A, B, C, D, E) and narrow wedge V-belts (3V, 5V, 8V) both transmit power through friction, but narrow wedge belts have a deeper, narrower cross section that delivers more power per belt. A drive running three B-section belts might be replaced by two 5V narrow wedge belts with smaller sheaves.
Stay with classical when:
- Your existing sheaves are classical-groove and you are replacing belts only (not sheaves).
- Budget is the primary consideration and the drive is performing adequately.
- The application is low-criticality with infrequent operation.
Consider upgrading to narrow wedge when:
- You are designing a new drive and want the most compact, efficient design.
- You are replacing sheaves anyway due to wear.
- You want to reduce the number of belts on a multi-belt drive.
- Space constraints require smaller sheave diameters.
See our V-Belt Selection Guide for more help choosing between belt types.
Common Applications for Classical V-Belts
| Application | Typical Section | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| HVAC air handlers and blowers | A, B | Most common V-belt application in commercial buildings. Single or dual belt drives. |
| Centrifugal pumps | A, B, C | Steady load, moderate speed. Section depends on motor HP. |
| Air compressors | B, C | Reciprocating compressors generate pulsating loads. Consider cogged (BX, CX) for longer life. |
| Agricultural equipment | A, B, C | Combines, grain augers, crop handling. Dusty environments accelerate wear. |
| Woodworking machinery | A, B | Table saws, planers, lathes. Sawdust exposure requires periodic belt inspection. |
| Industrial conveyors (general) | B, C | Package handling, bulk material, manufacturing lines. Multiple belt drives common. |
| Printing equipment | A, B | Legacy printing presses. Newer equipment often uses timing belts for precision. |
| Mining and quarry | C, D, E | Large fans, crushers, screens, heavy pumps. Multi-belt or banded drives. |
| Textile machinery | A, B | Spinning, weaving, finishing equipment. Moderate loads, continuous duty. |
| Shop and garage equipment | A, FHP | Drill presses, bench grinders, band saws, small compressors. |
Classical V-Belt Brands We Carry
- Gates: Hi-Power II classical V-belts. The most widely specified classical belt in North America. All sections, full length range.
- Continental (ContiTech): Classical V-belts in A through E sections. Direct cross-reference to Gates.
- Bando: Power King classical V-belts. All standard sections and lengths.
- Diesel Belting: Classical V-belts at competitive pricing. A through D sections stocked.
We cross-reference classical V-belt part numbers across all brands. A68 from Gates, Continental, Bando, and Diesel Belting are all the same physical belt. Call 888-203-2358 with any part number and we will confirm the match from any brand in stock.
Frequently Asked Questions
The letter designates the belt's cross section size. Each letter corresponds to a specific top width and depth: A = 1/2" wide x 5/16" deep, B = 5/8" x 13/32", C = 7/8" x 17/32", D = 1-1/4" x 3/4", E = 1-1/2" x 1". Larger letters handle higher horsepower. The belt section must match the sheave groove section.
B section is the single most common classical V-belt section in North American industry. It covers the 1 to 25 HP range that includes the majority of general industrial drives: HVAC blowers, pumps, compressors, conveyors, and agricultural equipment. A section is the second most common, covering lighter duty drives up to about 10 HP.
The part number is the section letter followed by the inside length in inches. Measure the outside circumference with a flexible tape and subtract the conversion factor: A subtract 2, B subtract 3, C subtract 4, D subtract 5, E subtract 7. For example, a B-section belt measuring 103" outside circumference: 103 minus 3 = 100, so the part number is B100.
Yes. Cogged V-belts (AX, BX, CX) are direct replacements for their classical counterparts (A, B, C) on the same sheaves. The cross-section dimensions and sheave groove are identical. Cogged belts offer better flexibility, heat dissipation, efficiency, and typically 20-30% longer service life.
A-section belts are 1/2" wide and handle up to about 10 HP. B-section belts are 5/8" wide and handle up to about 25 HP. B-section belts also require larger minimum sheave diameters (5.4" vs. 3.0" for A). Use A for lighter drives and B when the drive exceeds A-section capacity. They are not interchangeable because the sheave groove dimensions are different.
Yes. Many industrial drives use two or more matched V-belts running side by side on a multi-groove sheave. This increases load capacity without moving to a larger belt section. When replacing multiple belts, always replace the entire set at once. Mixing a new belt with worn belts causes uneven load distribution and shortens the life of the new belt. For drives prone to belt turnover or vibration, consider banded V-belts which join multiple belts into a single unit.
Yes. Texas Belting stocks thousands of classical V-belt sizes across all five sections at our Houston warehouse. A and B sections have the deepest inventory. In-stock belts ship same day when ordered before the daily cutoff. For less common lengths in C, D, and E sections, lead time is typically 1 to 3 business days. Call 888-203-2358 to check availability.
V-Belt Drive Components
Every classical V-belt needs a matched sheave (pulley) with the correct groove profile. The sheave groove section must match the belt section. Browse our V-belt drive components, or see our Sheave Selection Guide for help choosing the right one.
Related Pages
Need a Classical V-Belt?
Texas Belting stocks classical V-belts in A through E sections from Gates, Continental, Bando, and Diesel Belting. Send us your part number for fast quoting, or describe your drive and we will confirm the right belt.
Request a Quote Call 888-203-2358