A crank is an arm attached at a right angle to a rotating shaft by which
circular motion is imparted to or received from the shaft. When combined with a connecting rod, it can be used to convert
circular motion into
reciprocating motion, or vice versa. The arm may be a bent portion of the shaft, or a separate arm or disk attached to it. Attached to the end of the crank by a pivot is a rod, usually called a
connecting rod (conrod).
The term often refers to a human-powered crank which is used to manually turn an axle, as in a
bicycle
A bicycle, also called a pedal cycle, bike, push-bike or cycle, is a human-powered transport, human-powered or motorized bicycle, motor-assisted, bicycle pedal, pedal-driven, single-track vehicle, with two bicycle wheel, wheels attached to a ...
crankset or a
brace and bit drill. In this case a person's arm or leg serves as the connecting rod, applying reciprocating force to the crank. There is usually a bar perpendicular to the other end of the arm, often with a freely rotatable handle or
pedal attached.
Examples

Familiar examples include:
Hand-powered cranks
*
Spinning wheel
* Mechanical
pencil sharpener
*
Fishing reel
A fishing reel is a hand-crank (mechanism), cranked reel used in angling to wind and stow fishing line, typically mounted onto a fishing rod, but may also be used on compound bows or crossbows to retrieve tethered arrows when bowfishing.
Modern ...
and other
reels for cables, wires, ropes, etc.
*Starting handle for older cars
* Manually operated car window
* The carpenter's
brace is a compound crank.
* The crank set that drives a
handcycle
A handcycle is a type of human-powered land vehicle powered by the arms rather than the Human leg, legs, as on a bicycle. Most handcycles are tricycle in form, with two coasting rear Bicycle wheel, wheels and one steerable powered front wheel ...
through its handles.
* Hand winches
Foot-powered cranks
* The crankset that drives a bicycle via the pedals.
*
Treadle sewing machine
Engines
Almost all
reciprocating engine
A reciprocating engine, more often known as a piston engine, is a heat engine that uses one or more reciprocating pistons to convert high temperature and high pressure into a rotating motion. This article describes the common features of al ...
s use cranks (with
connecting rods) to transform the back-and-forth motion of the pistons into rotary motion. The cranks are incorporated into a
crankshaft
A crankshaft is a mechanical component used in a reciprocating engine, piston engine to convert the reciprocating motion into rotational motion. The crankshaft is a rotating Shaft (mechanical engineering), shaft containing one or more crankpins, ...
.
History
Asia
China
It was thought that evidence of the earliest true crank handle was found in a Han era glazed-earthenware tomb model of an agricultural
winnowing fan dated no later than 200 AD,
but since then a series of similar pottery models with crank operated winnowing fans were unearthed, with one of them dating back to the Western Han dynasty (202 BC – 9 AD).
[.] The Chinese used the crank-and-connecting rod in ancient blasting apparatus, textile machinery and agricultural machinery no later than the Western Han dynasty (202 BC – 9 AD). It was first used in the manually operated quern and ''long'' (grain decortication item) before evolving into other devices. According to F. Lisheng and T. Qingjun, the hand-crank of the rotary quern was different from a crank, which was the combination of a hand-crank and a push-and-pull connecting rod by a hinge.
Eventually crank-and-connecting rods were used in the inter-conversion or rotary and reciprocating motion for other applications such as flour-sifting, treadle spinning wheels, water-powered furnace bellows, and silk-reeling machines.
Middle East
Ancient Egyptians had manual drills resembling a crank at the time of the
Old Kingdom (2686–2181 BCE) and even a hieroglyph for the tool. However the Ancient Egyptian drill didn't operate as a true crank.
Later evidence for the crank, combined with a connecting rod in a machine, appears in the Ancient Greek
Hierapolis sawmill in
Roman Asia from the 3rd century AD and two stone
sawmills at
Gerasa
Jerash (; , , ) is a city in northern Jordan. The city is the administrative center of the Jerash Governorate, and has a population of 50,745 as of 2015. It is located 30.0 miles north of the capital city Amman.
The earliest evidence of settl ...
,
Roman Syria, and
Ephesus
Ephesus (; ; ; may ultimately derive from ) was an Ancient Greece, ancient Greek city on the coast of Ionia, in present-day Selçuk in İzmir Province, Turkey. It was built in the 10th century BC on the site of Apasa, the former Arzawan capital ...
, Greek Ionia under Rome, (both 6th century AD).
[: ] On the
pediment of the Hierapolis mill, a
waterwheel fed by a
mill race
A mill race, millrace or millrun, mill lade (Scotland) or mill leat (Southwest England) is the current of water that turns a water wheel, or the channel ( sluice) conducting water to or from a water wheel. Compared with the broad waters of a m ...
is shown powering via a
gear train two
frame saws which cut rectangular blocks by the way of some kind of connecting rods and, through mechanical necessity, cranks. The accompanying inscription is in
Greek.
The crank and connecting rod mechanisms of the other two archaeologically attested sawmills worked without a gear train.
The crank appears in the mid-9th century in several of the hydraulic devices described by the
Banū Mūsā brothers in their ''
Book of Ingenious Devices''.
These devices, however, made only partial rotations and could not transmit much power, although only a small modification would have been required to convert it to a
crankshaft
A crankshaft is a mechanical component used in a reciprocating engine, piston engine to convert the reciprocating motion into rotational motion. The crankshaft is a rotating Shaft (mechanical engineering), shaft containing one or more crankpins, ...
.
Al-Jazari (1136–1206) described a crank and connecting rod system in a rotating machine in two of his water-raising machines.
[ Ahmad Y Hassan]
The Crank-Connecting Rod System in a Continuously Rotating Machine
His twin-cylinder
pump
A pump is a device that moves fluids (liquids or gases), or sometimes Slurry, slurries, by mechanical action, typically converted from electrical energy into hydraulic or pneumatic energy.
Mechanical pumps serve in a wide range of application ...
incorporated a crankshaft. A crank is later also described in an early 15th century Arabic manuscript of
Hero of Alexandria's ''Mechanics''.
Europe
Antiquity
The first rotary hand mills, or rotary querns, appeared in Spain (600 BC – 500 BC),
before they spread to the East.
The handle near the outer edge of the rotary part makes the crank,
a human arm powering the rotation would be the connecting rod.
According to F. Lisheng and T. Qingjun, the hand-crank of the rotary quern was different from a crank, which was the combination of a hand-crank and a push-and-pull connecting rod by a hinge.
[.]
The Antikythera mechanism, dated to around 200 BC, used a crank as a part of its mechanism. The crank was used to manually setup the starting date for a prediction.Later evidence for the crank, combined with a connecting rod in a machine, appears in the Ancient Greek
Hierapolis sawmill in
Roman Asia from the 3rd century AD and two stone
sawmills at
Gerasa
Jerash (; , , ) is a city in northern Jordan. The city is the administrative center of the Jerash Governorate, and has a population of 50,745 as of 2015. It is located 30.0 miles north of the capital city Amman.
The earliest evidence of settl ...
,
Roman Syria, and
Ephesus
Ephesus (; ; ; may ultimately derive from ) was an Ancient Greece, ancient Greek city on the coast of Ionia, in present-day Selçuk in İzmir Province, Turkey. It was built in the 10th century BC on the site of Apasa, the former Arzawan capital ...
, Greek Ionia under Rome, (both 6th century AD).
On the
pediment of the Hierapolis mill, a
waterwheel fed by a
mill race
A mill race, millrace or millrun, mill lade (Scotland) or mill leat (Southwest England) is the current of water that turns a water wheel, or the channel ( sluice) conducting water to or from a water wheel. Compared with the broad waters of a m ...
is shown powering via a
gear train two
frame saws which cut rectangular blocks by the way of some kind of connecting rods and, through mechanical necessity, cranks. The accompanying inscription is in
Greek.
The crank and connecting rod mechanisms of the other two archaeologically attested sawmills worked without a gear train.
A Roman iron crank of yet unknown purpose dating to the 2nd century AD was excavated in
Augusta Raurica,
Switzerland
Switzerland, officially the Swiss Confederation, is a landlocked country located in west-central Europe. It is bordered by Italy to the south, France to the west, Germany to the north, and Austria and Liechtenstein to the east. Switzerland ...
. The long piece has fitted to one end a long bronze handle, the other handle being lost.
An true iron crank about long was excavated, along with a pair of shattered mill-stones of diameter and diverse iron items, in
Aschheim, close to
Munich
Munich is the capital and most populous city of Bavaria, Germany. As of 30 November 2024, its population was 1,604,384, making it the third-largest city in Germany after Berlin and Hamburg. Munich is the largest city in Germany that is no ...
. The crank-operated
Roman mill is dated to the late 2nd century AD. However an often cited modern reconstruction of a bucket-chain pump driven by hand-cranked
flywheels from the
Nemi ships
The Nemi ships were two ships, of different sizes, built under the reign of the Roman emperor Caligula in the 1st century AD on Lake Nemi. Although the purpose of the ships is speculated upon, the larger ship was an elaborate floating palace, w ...
has been dismissed as "archaeological fantasy".
In ancient literature, there is a reference to the workings of water-powered
marble
Marble is a metamorphic rock consisting of carbonate minerals (most commonly calcite (CaCO3) or Dolomite (mineral), dolomite (CaMg(CO3)2) that have recrystallized under the influence of heat and pressure. It has a crystalline texture, and is ty ...
saws close to
Trier
Trier ( , ; ), formerly and traditionally known in English as Trèves ( , ) and Triers (see also Names of Trier in different languages, names in other languages), is a city on the banks of the Moselle (river), Moselle in Germany. It lies in a v ...
, now
Germany
Germany, officially the Federal Republic of Germany, is a country in Central Europe. It lies between the Baltic Sea and the North Sea to the north and the Alps to the south. Its sixteen States of Germany, constituent states have a total popu ...
, by the late 4th century poet
Ausonius
Decimius Magnus Ausonius (; ) was a Latin literature, Roman poet and Education in ancient Rome, teacher of classical rhetoric, rhetoric from Burdigala, Gallia Aquitania, Aquitaine (now Bordeaux, France). For a time, he was tutor to the future E ...
;
about the same time, these mill types seem also to be indicated by the Greek
Christian saint Gregory of Nyssa from
Anatolia
Anatolia (), also known as Asia Minor, is a peninsula in West Asia that makes up the majority of the land area of Turkey. It is the westernmost protrusion of Asia and is geographically bounded by the Mediterranean Sea to the south, the Aegean ...
, demonstrating a diversified use of water-power in many parts of the Roman Empire The three finds push back the date of the invention of the crank and connecting rod by a full millennium:
Middle Ages
A rotary
grindstone − the earliest representation of one −
which is operated by a crank handle is shown in the
Carolingian manuscript ''
Utrecht Psalter''; the pen drawing of around 830 goes back to a late antique original. A musical tract ascribed to the abbot
Odo of Cluny (−942) describes a fretted stringed instrument which was sounded by a resined wheel turned with a crank; the device later appears in two 12th century illuminated manuscripts.
There are also two pictures of
Fortuna
Fortuna (, equivalent to the Greek mythology, Greek goddess Tyche) is the goddess of fortune and the personification of luck in Religion in ancient Rome, Roman religion who, largely thanks to the Late Antique author Boethius, remained popular thr ...
cranking her wheel of destiny from this and the following century.
The use of crank handles in
trepanation
Trepanning, also known as trepanation, trephination, trephining or making a burr hole (the verb ''trepan'' derives from Old French from Medieval Latin from Ancient Greek, Greek , literally "borer, auger"), is a surgical intervention in which a ...
drills was depicted in the 1887 edition of the ''
Dictionnaire des Antiquités Grecques et Romaines'' and ascribed to the
Spanish Muslim surgeon
Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi; however, the existence of such a device cannot be confirmed by the original illuminations and thus has to be discounted.
The
Benedictine
The Benedictines, officially the Order of Saint Benedict (, abbreviated as O.S.B. or OSB), are a mainly contemplative monastic order of the Catholic Church for men and for women who follow the Rule of Saint Benedict. Initiated in 529, th ...
monk
Theophilus Presbyter (c. 1070−1125) described crank handles "used in the turning of casting cores".
The Italian physician
Guido da Vigevano (c. 1280−1349), planning for a new crusade, made illustrations for a
paddle boat and war carriages that were propelled by manually turned compound cranks and gear wheels (center of image). The ''
Luttrell Psalter
The Luttrell Psalter (British Library, Add MS 42130) is an illuminated manuscript, illuminated psalter commissioned by Sir Geoffrey Luttrell (1276–1345), lord of the manor of Irnham in Lincolnshire, written and illustrated on parchment ''circa'' ...
'', dating to around 1340, describes a grindstone which was rotated by two cranks, one at each end of its axle; the geared hand-mill, operated either with one or two cranks, appeared later in the 15th century;
Medieval
cranes were occasionally powered by cranks, although more often by
windlasses.
Renaissance
The crank became common in Europe by the early 15th century, often seen in the works of those such as the
German military engineer
Konrad Kyeser.
Devices depicted in Kyeser's ''
Bellifortis'' include cranked windlasses (instead of spoke-wheels) for spanning siege crossbows, cranked chain of buckets for water-lifting and cranks fitted to a wheel of bells.
Kyeser also equipped the
Archimedes screws for water-raising with a crank handle, an innovation which subsequently replaced the ancient practice of working the pipe by treading. The earliest evidence for the fitting of a well-hoist with cranks is found in a miniature of c. 1425 in the German ''Hausbuch of the Mendel Foundation''.
The first depictions of the compound crank in the carpenter's
brace appear between 1420 and 1430 in various northern European artwork.
The rapid adoption of the compound crank can be traced in the works of the
Anonymous of the Hussite Wars, an unknown German engineer writing on the state of the military technology of his day: first, the connecting-rod, applied to cranks, reappeared, second, double compound cranks also began to be equipped with connecting-rods and third, the flywheel was employed for these cranks to get them over the 'dead-spot'.
One of the drawings of the Anonymous of the Hussite Wars shows a boat with a pair of paddle-wheels at each end turned by men operating compound cranks (see above). The concept was much improved by the Italian engineer and writer
Roberto Valturio in 1463, who devised a boat with five sets, where the parallel cranks are all joined to a single power source by one connecting-rod, an idea also taken up by his compatriot
Francesco di Giorgio.
In
Renaissance Italy, the earliest evidence of a compound crank and connecting-rod is found in the sketch books of
Taccola, but the device is still mechanically misunderstood.
A sound grasp of the crank motion involved demonstrates a little later
Pisanello who painted a piston-pump driven
by a water-wheel and operated by two simple cranks and two connecting-rods.
The 15th century also saw the introduction of cranked rack-and-pinion devices, called cranequins, which were fitted to the
crossbow
A crossbow is a ranged weapon using an Elasticity (physics), elastic launching device consisting of a Bow and arrow, bow-like assembly called a ''prod'', mounted horizontally on a main frame called a ''tiller'', which is hand-held in a similar f ...
's stock as a means of exerting even more force while spanning the missile weapon (see right). In the textile industry, cranked
reels for winding skeins of yarn were introduced.
Around 1480, the early medieval rotary grindstone was improved with a treadle and crank mechanism. Cranks mounted on push-carts first appear in a German engraving of 1589.
From the 16th century onwards, evidence of cranks and connecting rods integrated into machine design becomes abundant in the technological treatises of the period:
Agostino Ramelli's ''The Diverse and Artifactitious Machines'' of 1588 alone depicts eighteen examples, a number which rises in the ''Theatrum Machinarum Novum'' by
Georg Andreas Böckler to 45 different machines, one third of the total.
20th century

Cranks were formerly common on some machines in the early 20th century; for example almost all
phonograph
A phonograph, later called a gramophone, and since the 1940s a record player, or more recently a turntable, is a device for the mechanical and analogue reproduction of sound. The sound vibration Waveform, waveforms are recorded as correspond ...
s before the 1930s were powered by
clockwork
Clockwork refers to the inner workings of either mechanical devices called clocks and watches (where it is also called the movement (clockwork), movement) or other mechanisms that work similarly, using a series of gears driven by a spring or wei ...
motors wound with cranks. Reciprocating piston engines use cranks to convert the linear piston motion into rotational motion.
Internal combustion engine
An internal combustion engine (ICE or IC engine) is a heat engine in which the combustion of a fuel occurs with an oxidizer (usually air) in a combustion chamber that is an integral part of the working fluid flow circuit. In an internal comb ...
s of early 20th century
automobile
A car, or an automobile, is a motor vehicle with wheels. Most definitions of cars state that they run primarily on roads, Car seat, seat one to eight people, have four wheels, and mainly transport private transport#Personal transport, peopl ...
s were usually started with hand cranks (known as ''starting handles'' in the
UK), before
electric starters came into general use. The last car model which incorporated a crank was the
Citroën 2CV
The Citroën 2CV (, , lit. "two horses", meaning "two Tax horsepower#France, ''taxable'' horsepower") is an economy car produced by the French company Citroën from 1948 to 1990. Introduced at the 1948 Paris Paris Auto Show, Salon de l'Automobi ...
1948-1990
The 1918
Reo owner's manual describes how to hand crank the automobile:
* First: Make sure the gear shifting lever is in neutral position.
* Second: The clutch pedal is unlatched and the clutch engaged. The brake pedal is pushed forward as far as possible setting brakes on the rear wheel.
* Third: See that spark control lever, which is the short lever located on top of the steering wheel on the right side, is back as far as possible toward the driver and the long lever, on top of the steering column controlling the carburetor, is pushed forward about one inch from its retarded position.
* Fourth: Turn ignition switch to point marked "B" or "M"
* Fifth: Set the carburetor control on the steering column to the point marked "START." Be sure there is gasoline in the carburetor. Test for this by pressing down on the small pin projecting from the front of the bowl until the carburetor floods. If it fails to flood it shows that the fuel is not being delivered to the carburetor properly and the motor cannot be expected to start. See instructions on page 56 for filling the vacuum tank.
* Sixth: When it is certain the carburetor has a supply of fuel, grasp the handle of starting crank, push in endwise to engage ratchet with crank shaft pin and turn over the motor by giving a quick upward pull. Never push down, because if for any reason the motor should kick back, it would endanger the operator.
Crank axle
A crank axle is a
crankshaft
A crankshaft is a mechanical component used in a reciprocating engine, piston engine to convert the reciprocating motion into rotational motion. The crankshaft is a rotating Shaft (mechanical engineering), shaft containing one or more crankpins, ...
which also serves the purpose of an
axle
An axle or axletree is a central shaft for a rotation, rotating wheel and axle, wheel or gear. On wheeled vehicles, the axle may be fixed to the wheels, rotating with them, or fixed to the vehicle, with the wheels rotating around the axle. In ...
. It is used on
steam locomotive
A steam locomotive is a locomotive that provides the force to move itself and other vehicles by means of the expansion of steam. It is fuelled by burning combustible material (usually coal, Fuel oil, oil or, rarely, Wood fuel, wood) to heat ...
s with inside cylinders.
See also
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Human power
*
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References
Bibliography
*
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External links
Crank highlight: Hypervideo of construction and operation of a four cylinder internal combustion engine courtesy of Ford Motor CompanyKinematic Models for Design Digital Library (KMODDL)- Movies and photos of hundreds of working mechanical-systems models at Cornell University. Also includes a
e-book libraryof classic texts on mechanical design and engineering.
{{Authority control
Linkages (mechanical)