Turn specs into torque for confident motor choices. Includes hover modeling, margins, and unit conversions. Download reports and tune performance with accurate numbers always.
Choose a mode, enter your specs, then calculate torque. Hover mode estimates shaft power from thrust physics and losses.
These examples are illustrative. Real torque depends on prop design, airflow, and ESC timing.
| Drone type | Mass (kg) | Props | Hover RPM | Estimated shaft power / motor (W) | Estimated torque (N·m) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Micro quad | 0.25 | 3 inch | 9000 | 18 | 0.019 |
| 5-inch FPV | 0.65 | 5 inch | 8500 | 65 | 0.073 |
| Camera quad | 1.60 | 10 inch | 6000 | 250 | 0.398 |
| Heavy lifter | 6.00 | 18 inch | 4500 | 850 | 1.803 |
| Long-endurance | 2.20 | 13 inch | 5200 | 260 | 0.477 |
Hover and thrust modes apply a loss factor (k) and a prop efficiency (η) to move from ideal induced power to a practical shaft power estimate.
Torque is the twisting force the motor must deliver to spin the propeller at a chosen RPM. Higher torque usually means higher current draw, more heat, and a stronger requirement for the ESC and wiring. It is a practical “load” indicator when tuning a build. Small 5-inch freestyle builds often see 0.05–0.15 N·m near mid‑throttle, while heavy‑lift props can exceed 0.3 N·m.
If you know mechanical power at the shaft, torque follows T = P / ω, where ω = 2π·RPM/60. For example, 200 W at 10,000 RPM corresponds to about 0.191 N·m. This mode is useful when you have bench power data or an estimated efficiency.
In hover, total thrust roughly equals weight. This calculator can estimate the thrust per motor from all‑up mass, motor count, and a safety margin (often 20–40%). Using prop diameter, air density, and RPM, it estimates torque consistent with the required thrust at that speed.
If your prop test table lists thrust at a specific RPM, the thrust mode lets you convert that thrust into an equivalent torque estimate. Matching thrust and RPM is important: using a higher RPM than your data will understate required torque and may overspeed the prop.
Torque rises quickly with prop size. A modest increase in diameter can demand much more torque because the blades sweep a larger disk area and move more air. When you upsize props, expect lower maximum RPM, higher torque, and a higher chance of ESC temperature limits.
Air density drops with altitude and higher temperatures. Lower density reduces thrust at a given RPM, so you may need more RPM and power to hold hover. Enter local density (typical sea level ~1.225 kg/m³) to make torque estimates more realistic for your environment.
Compare torque in N·m, N·cm, and oz·in to match your datasheets. If calculated torque implies very high current, reduce prop size, reduce pitch, or choose a motor with a better match. Always validate with real thrust and current measurements before flight. Log temperatures during long hover tests.
It outputs torque in N·m, N·cm, and oz·in so you can compare motor datasheets and test reports. Use N·m for engineering calculations and oz·in for some hobby catalogs.
KV helps estimate RPM from voltage, but it does not directly give loaded torque. Use your expected RPM under load, then compute torque from power or thrust data for better accuracy.
Many pilots use 20–40% margin to cover wind, maneuvers, and battery sag. For payload or long endurance builds, choose the higher end and verify current draw at your target hover RPM.
Larger diameter and higher pitch move more air per revolution, which increases aerodynamic drag on the blades. That drag shows up as higher required torque, usually raising current and ESC temperature.
Start with 1.225 kg/m³ for sea level. Hot weather or high elevation lowers density, reducing thrust at the same RPM. If you fly above 1,500 m, consider 1.06–1.10 kg/m³ as a rough range.
No. Prop geometry, blade count, ESC timing, and frame airflow change real torque. Treat the output as an engineering estimate, then confirm with thrust-stand measurements and flight logs before relying on it.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.