nanobot29
Mechanical
- Apr 5, 2011
- 53
I'm fairly new at rotordynamics and I'm having some trouble interpreting some test data. i would appreciate some input. We're working on a motor that runs on magnetic bearings. The mag bearings lost power during a test and the rotor dropped onto a set of auxiliary ball bearings while spinning at 22,500 rpm (375 Hz). There's a 0.010 inch radial gap between the ball bearing inner race and the rotor O.D. Test data from an accelerometer sitting in the endbell shows a peak-to-peak frequency of 210 Hz after the drop. Is this frequency a result of the rotor whirling? my co-workers are convinced that this 210 Hz is the whirl frequency. I have trouble believing this because this would generate an enourmous whirl force.
could it be possible that the rotor was whirling at half the frequency (105 Hz) and this whirl frequency may have excited a mode in the housing or endbell which has a natural frequency of twice that amount? is it possible to excite a mode while applying a force at a frequency of half it's natural frequency?
The reason i dont believe that 210 Hz is a whirl frequency is because a previous test showed that the rotor whirled at 40 Hz during a drop at 18,000 rpm. huge difference. unfortunately, our data aqcuisition tools were turned off during the recent test and all we have to go by is accelerometer data from the EndBell.... which shows 210 Hz peak-to-peak.
Thanks for any info or insight you may have.
could it be possible that the rotor was whirling at half the frequency (105 Hz) and this whirl frequency may have excited a mode in the housing or endbell which has a natural frequency of twice that amount? is it possible to excite a mode while applying a force at a frequency of half it's natural frequency?
The reason i dont believe that 210 Hz is a whirl frequency is because a previous test showed that the rotor whirled at 40 Hz during a drop at 18,000 rpm. huge difference. unfortunately, our data aqcuisition tools were turned off during the recent test and all we have to go by is accelerometer data from the EndBell.... which shows 210 Hz peak-to-peak.
Thanks for any info or insight you may have.