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Classical vs Cogged vs Narrow Wedge, Which V-Belt Is Right?

JK Fenner Authorised Distributor · Bengaluru · 7 min read

JK Fenner's Poly-F range covers three fundamentally different V-belt designs: Classical (wrapped), Cogged (raw edge) and Narrow Wedge. Each has engineering advantages that make it the right choice for specific applications. Understanding the differences saves money and extends belt life.

Classical V-Belts (Wrapped), A, B, C, D, E

The original and most widely used V-belt design. A fabric-wrapped rubber body with polyester or Aramid tension cords. The wrap provides a protective outer layer and a consistent friction coefficient.

Best for: General industrial drives, agricultural equipment, HVAC, light compressors, pumps
Efficiency: 93, 96%
Temperature range: −18°C to +60°C
Typical service life: 12, 24 months in normal duty
JK Fenner sections: A (13mm top width) · B (17mm) · C (22mm) · D (32mm) · E (38mm)

Limitation: The outer wrap reduces flexibility. On small-diameter pulleys, the belt cannot flex freely, causing heat buildup and premature cracking. Minimum recommended pulley sizes are larger than for cogged belts.

Cogged V-Belts (Raw Edge), AX, BX, CX

Same cross-section widths as Classical A/B/C but with notches cut into the inner face and no outer fabric wrap. The raw rubber edge contacts the pulley groove directly, and the notches allow the belt to flex more freely.

Best for: Small-pulley drives, variable speed drives, clutching applications, high-flex requirements
Efficiency: 95, 98% (2, 3% better than Classical equivalent)
Temperature range: −20°C to +70°C
Minimum pulley: Up to 20% smaller than Classical equivalent
JK Fenner sections: AX · BX · CX

Key advantage: Higher coefficient of friction with pulley groove (raw rubber vs wrapped). Better grip, less slipping tendency, higher efficiency, lower operating temperature. A direct drop-in replacement for Classical A/B/C on the same pulley, just better performance.

When to choose Cogged over Classical: Any application where the small pulley is less than 125mm (B section) or 100mm (A section). Also where ambient temperature is consistently above 45°C (common in South India).

Narrow Wedge V-Belts, SPZ, SPA, SPB, SPC

A completely different geometry from Classical/Cogged. Narrower top width but deeper cross-section, the wedge angle is steeper (34° vs 40°). This geometry generates greater wedging force for the same belt width, allowing significantly higher power transmission.

Best for: High-power drives, compact multi-belt drives, modern industrial equipment
Power vs Classical: 30, 40% more power per belt (SPB vs C section equivalent)
Efficiency: 96, 98%
JK Fenner sections: SPZ (10mm) · SPA (13mm) · SPB (17mm) · SPC (22mm)

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureClassicalCoggedNarrow Wedge
Power capacityBaselineSame as Classical30, 40% higher
Efficiency93, 96%95, 98%96, 98%
Small pulley toleranceStandardBetter (20% smaller)Good
Heat generationHigherLowerLow
CostLowest10, 15% more20, 30% more
Pulley groove compatibilityClassical groovesClassical groovesNarrow/wedge grooves only
Replacement for, Direct swap for ClassicalRequires new pulleys

The Upgrade Decision

Classical → Cogged: Drop-in upgrade. Same pulleys. Better performance, longer life. Recommended for any drive running in hot environments or on small pulleys.

Classical → Narrow Wedge: Requires new narrow-groove pulleys. Justified when you need to reduce belt count (from 6 belts to 4), reduce pulley width, or handle growing power requirements without redesigning the full drive.

Not sure which to choose? Tell us your existing belt designation (e.g. "B68 Ã, 4 belts") and your motor kW rating. We'll advise whether a cogged upgrade makes sense or whether the full drive redesign to narrow wedge pays off. Call +91 99801 48526.
Shop All V-Belt Types ← Selection Guide