geesamand
Mechanical
- Jun 2, 2006
- 688
I'm trying to troubleshoot a recurring issue when we build a new machine.
It's a 3" horizontal shaft with a 60# impeller that is mounted at the end of the shaft about 40" away from the inner bearing. The inner bearing is a deep groove ball bearing (6022) permitted to float axially in it's housing bore and the outer bearing is a 6321 that is fixed axially in the housing bore. Both have tight fits on the inner race. The critical speed of the shaft assembly is about 850rpm and the operating speed is about 425rpm. It's driven by an 1800rpm motor and 4.18:1 toothed belt. The shaft is fully machined and the impeller is balanced to G2.5.
The build these machines and spin test them in air. The problem is that a fraction of them will show much higher vibration (8-9 mils displacement) vs. the normal 2 mils. The frequency analysis shows the vibration is predominantly at 850cpm (2x shaft). 1x and 3x shaft usually shows at a much lower level. I've reviewed this problem many times and unfortunately I still can't pin down why some of these machines run poorly and the others don't.
I thought I understood this situation but I'm going to back up and ask some very fundamental questions:
1) Does the fact that operating speed = 1/2 critical speed tend to be an issue?
2) Is there any particular guideline for the alignment of the bearings to the shaft? (I have the bearing mfr's recommendations but that's in relation to bearing life, not acceptable vibration)
3) We often disassemble these bad actors and reinspect key components only to find nothing particularly wrong with them.
I'm ready to call a consultant and watch them waste our money just so I can step away from this thing for a while. I'd appreciate any suggestions that might help me avoid that equally unpleasant situation.
It's a 3" horizontal shaft with a 60# impeller that is mounted at the end of the shaft about 40" away from the inner bearing. The inner bearing is a deep groove ball bearing (6022) permitted to float axially in it's housing bore and the outer bearing is a 6321 that is fixed axially in the housing bore. Both have tight fits on the inner race. The critical speed of the shaft assembly is about 850rpm and the operating speed is about 425rpm. It's driven by an 1800rpm motor and 4.18:1 toothed belt. The shaft is fully machined and the impeller is balanced to G2.5.
The build these machines and spin test them in air. The problem is that a fraction of them will show much higher vibration (8-9 mils displacement) vs. the normal 2 mils. The frequency analysis shows the vibration is predominantly at 850cpm (2x shaft). 1x and 3x shaft usually shows at a much lower level. I've reviewed this problem many times and unfortunately I still can't pin down why some of these machines run poorly and the others don't.
I thought I understood this situation but I'm going to back up and ask some very fundamental questions:
1) Does the fact that operating speed = 1/2 critical speed tend to be an issue?
2) Is there any particular guideline for the alignment of the bearings to the shaft? (I have the bearing mfr's recommendations but that's in relation to bearing life, not acceptable vibration)
3) We often disassemble these bad actors and reinspect key components only to find nothing particularly wrong with them.
I'm ready to call a consultant and watch them waste our money just so I can step away from this thing for a while. I'd appreciate any suggestions that might help me avoid that equally unpleasant situation.