Lower Ratios Increase Speed
A 13:1 gearset generally cycles faster than an 18:1 or 32:1 gearset, but it can place greater demand on the motor and electrical system.
Estimate your AEG rate of fire using motor speed, battery voltage, gear ratio and drivetrain efficiency.
Use the motor manufacturer’s approximate unloaded RPM rating.
Lower values can represent short-stroked sector gears.
Accounts for spring load, friction, motor slowdown, wiring, battery sag and gearbox resistance.
A 13:1 gearset generally cycles faster than an 18:1 or 32:1 gearset, but it can place greater demand on the motor and electrical system.
Motor RPM ratings are usually measured with little or no load. Spring strength, shimming, friction and battery sag reduce actual speed.
High-speed builds may require proper angle of engagement, stronger piston components, active braking, short stroking and professional tuning.
This calculator provides a theoretical estimate only. Actual rate of fire depends on battery condition, motor characteristics, spring load, air-seal resistance, gear quality, shimming, lubrication, wiring, MOSFET settings, piston weight and other mechanical factors.