Most of my experience has been with diagnosing sleeve, journal or babbit bearings. I have used eddy current displacement probes comparing them to casing measurements.
The symptoms of the faulty bearing will change over time so you will notice differences in the vibration spectrum, bode and orbit plots.
Initially when the bearing first develops a fault through process abuse such as surging, cavitation or oil degredation a rub can develop. This will show up with an increased temperature, increased 1X RS radial vibration with a slight 2X RS harmonic showing looseness and the orbit will have a swing back or curl in the orbit indicating the rub. Phase angle may be unstable because of teh rub. The orbit may show a preload exhibited by an oval shape.
When the bearing fault progresses these symptoms may disappear because the rub may tend to disappear by the shaft smoothing the babbit out. I refer to this as the bearing healing itself. The primary symptom in the spectra now would be an increased amplitude at the 1X RS frequency with a more circular orbit. This can be confused as an unbalance problem. However, if you have a good base line at set process conditions one can pick the difference when there is no phase angle shift which usually supports unbalance. This is due to the increased clearance in the bearing hence stability is undermined. You may also start to see an oil whirl frequency at this stage. This healing of the bearing has been seen on steam turbines on the governor end beaing. The axial vibration may increase at the 1X RS freaquency due to the poor stiffness in the radial bearing.
Tilting pad bearings that are faulty may have an increased 1X RS frequency with sloping harmonics indicating bearing clearances opening up and a 1/2X RS with harmonics may be suttely present in the spectra as the pads will be rocking on their base.
Most of these symptoms are readily visible in the spectra with displacement probes. Accelerometers on the casing will have more noise and phase angle will not be very useful. So my preference is the displacement probe.
I trust this will be useful for you and if you have any further questions please post them.
Sorry I don't have any spectra to show you as I do not have access to any software containing history at the present.
DANIEL C. SMAISTRLA
judasmai@optusnet.com.au
Equipment: Centrifugal Pumps and compressors; Steam and Gas Turbines; Reciprocation Engines and
Compressors
Specialties: Machinery diagnostics, design application of compressors, FEED,Detail Design,construction,commissioning and maintenance.