electricpete
Electrical
- May 4, 2001
- 16,774
This is a 100hp, 3600rpm TEFC motor, with 6313 bearings.
In 2003, the motor bearings were replaced. Motor operated satisfactorily from 2003 until January 2011, when it started developing noise and increasing vibration (mostly broadband… like a “raised floor”).
We removed the motor and sent it to a repair shop.
The shop reports that for the outboard (NDE) bearing, the bearing inner ring is spinning on the shaft (a very undesirable condition, should be interference fit). Additionally, the outer ring is “locked in the housing”.
Additionally, their preliminary view of the cause of the event is that excessive greasing caused overheating which caused the bearing to grow enough to spin on the shaft.
I don’t know how much grease is present or what degree of overheating evidence is present.
Since it is a somewhat unusual failure, I am going to the shop tomorrow to take a look for myself. Before I do that, I want to think through what the possible causes are in general, and what I should be looking for during inspection of the disassembled motor.
My initial thought is that any indication of overheating doesn’t prove anything about the cause of the bearing spinning on the shaft… after all it will likely overheat once it starts spinning regardless of why it started spinning. Maybe the location of overheating will provide some clues, along with quantity of grease.
I also think that in general the most likely cause of any bearing spinning on shaft would generally be insufficient interference fit when bearing was last replaced. Shaft dimension and bearing housing dimension were not checked when bearings were replaced in 2003 (not by this motor repair shop).
Are there any other thoughts on what the possible causes of a bearing inner ring spinning and the shaft are..., and what I should be looking for during inspection?
How would outer ring locked in the housing relate to any of these scenarios?
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
In 2003, the motor bearings were replaced. Motor operated satisfactorily from 2003 until January 2011, when it started developing noise and increasing vibration (mostly broadband… like a “raised floor”).
We removed the motor and sent it to a repair shop.
The shop reports that for the outboard (NDE) bearing, the bearing inner ring is spinning on the shaft (a very undesirable condition, should be interference fit). Additionally, the outer ring is “locked in the housing”.
Additionally, their preliminary view of the cause of the event is that excessive greasing caused overheating which caused the bearing to grow enough to spin on the shaft.
I don’t know how much grease is present or what degree of overheating evidence is present.
Since it is a somewhat unusual failure, I am going to the shop tomorrow to take a look for myself. Before I do that, I want to think through what the possible causes are in general, and what I should be looking for during inspection of the disassembled motor.
My initial thought is that any indication of overheating doesn’t prove anything about the cause of the bearing spinning on the shaft… after all it will likely overheat once it starts spinning regardless of why it started spinning. Maybe the location of overheating will provide some clues, along with quantity of grease.
I also think that in general the most likely cause of any bearing spinning on shaft would generally be insufficient interference fit when bearing was last replaced. Shaft dimension and bearing housing dimension were not checked when bearings were replaced in 2003 (not by this motor repair shop).
Are there any other thoughts on what the possible causes of a bearing inner ring spinning and the shaft are..., and what I should be looking for during inspection?
How would outer ring locked in the housing relate to any of these scenarios?
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?