Right- any investigation should start with inspection of machine mounts and foundation. Be sure to check all mounting bolts, bearing attach bolts, etc. Also ensure no abnormalities in bearing lube system. Are there any adjacent machines running at same speed? <br><br>Next, break the investigation into two parts- (1) source vibration (changes in rotor balance, etc.), and (2) response. I assume the vibration level is rough or severe. Have you determined where vibration is strongest <br>(eg: drive end, opp drive end?) and direction?<br><br>(1) I recommend monitoring phase and amplitude at 1X rotation and comparing over several start-ups/coast-downs. Consider doing a balance sensitivity test with a trial weight to see if you can duplicate the changes (probably not if you have non-repeatable results to begin with). <br>If the phase varies significantly (with the same measurement point) between runs, then consider doing <br>an internal inspection (after looking at (2) below) for parts or assemblies on the rotor that can change <br>position and affect rotor balance. I don't know what that may be on your unit, but consider it anyhow. <br><br>(2) Investigate for structural resonance, especially if the vibration is significantly directional. The changes could be more related to changes in stiffness that affect the structural response to a steady vibration level. Depending on the arrangement and structural dynamics, small changes could have a significanteffect.<br><br>Beyond that, you could go goofy and consider conditions such as bent shaft/thermal bow combinations. <br><br>Pls let us know if you find anything.<br><br>