MachineryWatch
Mechanical
- Aug 29, 2002
- 114
I have been testing a V6 (4.2L) natural gas fuel, spark ignition, emergency generator running at 3600 RPM. The 1X RPM vibration amplitudes at all load conditions approach 1 inch per second on the generator bearing (spectrum peak). There is only 1 generator bearing on the outboard end of the generator.
The crest factor approaches 5 on this unit. This indicates that the energy in the waveform is not very close to a sine wave. This is common for internal combustion reciprocating engines. The amplitude observed in the waveform spikes is 5 g's (peak) which at 60 Hz is equivalent to 5 inches per second (peak) or about 250 mils (pk-pk)!!
These are prototype units and there has been some rotor/stator rubbing. The generator air gap is only 1 millimeter.
My data indicates that there may be some resonant amplification at the generator bearing. Amplitudes in the vertical direction are about 5X higher than in the horizontal direction, and there are some other indicators, as well.
(1)Are these extreme levels common on engine driven generators?
(2)Can the rubbing be expected with vibration levels like this and such a small air gap?
(3)Won't these high vibration levels significantly shorten the life of the generator bearing?
(4)Is the spiked nature of the waveform energy more or less damaging to the generator bearing and windings than a more sinusoidal waveform?
Skip Hartman
The crest factor approaches 5 on this unit. This indicates that the energy in the waveform is not very close to a sine wave. This is common for internal combustion reciprocating engines. The amplitude observed in the waveform spikes is 5 g's (peak) which at 60 Hz is equivalent to 5 inches per second (peak) or about 250 mils (pk-pk)!!
These are prototype units and there has been some rotor/stator rubbing. The generator air gap is only 1 millimeter.
My data indicates that there may be some resonant amplification at the generator bearing. Amplitudes in the vertical direction are about 5X higher than in the horizontal direction, and there are some other indicators, as well.
(1)Are these extreme levels common on engine driven generators?
(2)Can the rubbing be expected with vibration levels like this and such a small air gap?
(3)Won't these high vibration levels significantly shorten the life of the generator bearing?
(4)Is the spiked nature of the waveform energy more or less damaging to the generator bearing and windings than a more sinusoidal waveform?
Skip Hartman