Sponcyv:
It seems to me you are comparing apples and oranges, and trying to get doughnuts.
Reread your first link, that you got off the internet. It’s a Hertz stress calc., but isn’t that calc. for two cylinders of diff. radii, and a contact line of length “b”, and thus for the contact stress G you will have a contact width of “2a”? Your “radial circumf. of center of ring” really doesn’t have any real (or exact) meaning here. Redo your calcs., I haven’t checked them, but there must be something amiss because a contact width of “2a” = 2.298" doesn’t sound right with a 3.5" dia. steel cylinder. Your actual ring width of .719" sounds pretty small too, for your load, and will have to be (backed up) pressed into a much stronger support structure.
Your second calc. (from Roark) is a Hertz stress calc. too, for a true ball and socket condition; with dia’s. of Di, and a load condition factor K for a socket, instead of a sphere on a flat surface or on another sphere; and “2a” is a contact surface dia. for the given max. contact stress.
What it sounds like you have is basically a solid half sphere (ball) with a 3.5" dia. on a doughnut which should have a spherically shaped, upper, inner edge to rec’v. the ball. So, instead of the line load on the cylinders, you have an annular load of some avg. circumf. (7.56") and a width similar to “2a” which gives you your contact area. You really can’t account for your manuf. tolerance in these calcs., but you must be aware of it and account for it in your final thinking. And, it won’t be .01" now that we know about what size you are dealing with, although 3.5" is probably kinda small. I’m going to give up if you don’t provide a sketch, hide your edress in your sketch or its notes. Wake up, I’m not sure what you are trying to accomplish and I can’t really see what you have from here, and I shouldn’t have to keep guessing, I’m not the one asking for the help. Getting sufficient design info. around here is like pulling teeth. If you can’t spend the time, I’ll quit wasting mine. You can actually buy bearings like this, if my guess above it correct. I’ll have to dig a bit to find a catalog, but I’ve used them on heavy equipment design before. They’re called ‘spherical plain bearings’ and Torrington is one supplier. The ME guys will know if they’re still in business, or know of other suppliers.