Each bearing assemby (there are left and right) consists of 4 rails and one bearing strip. The rails are contained in a groove in the stationary member and a similar arrangement in the sliding member. The bearing carrier is a plastic strip with 10 holes, 10 balls. The balls are held in place by tabs on the bearing carrier. Assembled, the rails are parallel to each other in the X / Y / Z planes with the bearing carrier in the center. Bearing moves in X as the sliding member moves. At the end of each rail pair is a vertical stop to keep rails and presumably the carrier in contact. A gib in one sliding member provides adjustment.
As stated, rails, stops, carrier, bearings are all 1 year old. No damage, no wear, no mislocation. No mislocation until the unit is put into motion. The intened motion seems to be the carrier cycles with the sliding member. It appears the carrier will move with the slider, BUT doesn't always return. The balls continue to rotate as expected but the carrier fails to follow the slider. As this continues, the carrier overrides the end stop. End stop is solid but does not extend as far as I would have expected. The stationary and slider stops line up at only one place in the traverse. That would be the only time the bearing cannot override the stop. Otherwise the carrier and balls can flex over the stop and hang up.
My feeling is that something in the assembly or adjustment is causing our problem. Too much or too little tension in the gibb. Too much/too little lubrication. Not really a bearing problem but a machine building or maintenance problem.
Description sufficient?