Revolutions_per_minute Revolutions_per_minute

Revolutions per minute - Definition and Overview

For the Rise Against album, see Revolutions Per Minute (album).

The revolution per minute (abbreviated rpm, RPM or r/min) is a unit of frequency, commonly used to measure rotational speed. Examples:

  • Gramophone (phonograph) records typically rotate at 16, 33⅓, 45, or 78 rpm (CAV).
  • Audio CD rotation rates vary from about 500 rpm when reading the innermost CD track, to 180 rpm when reading tracks near the outer edge (CLV).
  • An automobile's engine typically makes between 700 and 7000 rpm.
  • Aircraft piston motors can rotate with 8000 rpm.
  • A racing car engine's limits are much higher, as high as 19,000 rpm in Formula One.
  • Gas turbine engines rotate at tens of thousands of rpm.
  • A computer's hard drive can range from 3000-7200 RPM on IDE types and from 10,000 to 25,000 on SATA and SCSI drives.
  • A 52x CD-ROM drive can rotate a CD as fast as 10,350 RPM.
  • Zippe-type centrifuge spins at 90,000 RPM.

Standards bodies generally recommend the symbol r/min, which better follows the general principles for forming unit symbols.

The SI unit of frequency is the hertz (Hz):

1 rpm = 1 r/min = 1/60 Hz

The SI unit of angular speed is the radian per second:

1 rpm = 1 r/min = 2π rad/min = 2π/60 rad/s = 0.10471976 rad/s


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