Engine RPM Calculator

AUTO

Find your engine RPM at a cruising speed for a given tire size, transmission gear, and axle ratio — useful for choosing gears or judging highway comfort.

Engine RPM
Wheel RPM

Use your top-gear (overdrive) ratio for highway cruising RPM. Most overdrives run 0.6 to 0.85.

How it works

Wheel RPM comes from speed and tire size: (mph × 1056) / (π × diameter). Engine RPM is wheel RPM multiplied by the transmission gear ratio and the axle ratio.

Calculating cruising RPM

Your engine speed at a given road speed is set by tire size, transmission gear ratio, and axle (final drive) ratio. The relationship is RPM = (MPH × gear ratio × axle ratio × 336) ÷ tire diameter (in), where 336 reconciles the units. Bigger tires lower RPM at a given speed; numerically higher (steeper) gears or axle ratios raise it.

This matters when choosing gears, an axle ratio, or tire size: too tall an overall ratio leaves the engine lugging below its power band on hills, while too short keeps RPM (and fuel use and noise) high on the highway. Aim for a cruising RPM that sits comfortably in the engine’s efficient range — and recheck it whenever you change tire size or gearing, since each shifts the result.

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The calculators and tools on Formula Factory are provided for general guidance and informational purposes only. Results are estimates based on standard formulas and the values you enter — they do not constitute professional engineering, electrical, or architectural advice. Always verify calculations with a qualified professional before making decisions for any safety-critical, code-compliance, or commercial application. Formula Factory makes no representations or warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of any result, and accepts no liability for errors, omissions, or any outcomes arising from reliance on this information.