Paper 3: Fluid Lubrication of Tapered Roller Bearings

Author(s):  
G. R. Higginson ◽  
R. H. Leaver

A new test rig is used to investigate the mode of lubrication of tapered roller bearings under axial loading. Two different bearing configurations for a 21/4-in shaft are used. The lubricants are mineral oils. The investigation establishes the nature of the lubrication at the load-carrying points in the bearing, at the inner and outer rings, and at the flange on the inner ring. Measurements of friction losses are made over a wide range of operating conditions; these are analysed theoretically, and are substantially accounted for by modern lubrication theory and a detailed consideration of the geometry of the bearings as a whole.

Author(s):  
W. G. Robertson ◽  
D. T. Spillman

The friction of run-in flat steel specimens lubricated with plain mineral oils has been measured in a pin and disc machine over a wide range of operating conditions. The hydrodynamic region was identified with the aid of electrical contact measurements and the corresponding friction data were considered in terms of the various theories which have been proposed to explain hydrodynamic action in nominally flat sliding contacts. It was concluded that the Lewicki inflow, the surface roughness, and the viscosity-density wedge mechanisms could not explain the observed friction; but that it could be explained if the surfaces formed a wedge whose angle was constant over the whole range of operating conditions. It is suggested that the wedge may be formed during the running-in process by mechanical effects such as flexural distortion. Particularly striking is the strength of the hydrodynamics which can occur in such ‘flat’ contacts: in terms of the wedge analysis the contact was operating close to the maximum theoretical load-carrying capacity. The implications with respect to the use of the pin and disc machine as a test rig are discussed and it is suggested that there might be a practical application in the design of ‘self-adjusting‘ slider bearings.


Lubricants ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 67
Author(s):  
Sven Wirsching ◽  
Max Marian ◽  
Marcel Bartz ◽  
Thomas Stahl ◽  
Sandro Wartzack

In the context of targeted improvements in energy efficiency, secondary rolling bearing contacts are gaining relevance. As such, the elastohydrodynamically lubricated (EHL) roller face/rib contact of tapered roller bearings significantly affects power losses. Consequently, this contribution aimed at numerical optimization of the pairing’s macro-geometric parameters. The latter were sampled by a statistical design of experiments (DoE) and the tribological behavior was predicted by means of EHL contact simulations. For each of the geometric pairings considered, a database was generated. Key target variables such as pressure, lubricant gap and friction were approximated by a meta-model of optimal prognosis (MOP) and optimization was carried out using an evolutionary algorithm (EA). It was shown that the tribological behavior was mainly determined by the basic geometric pairing and the radii while eccentricity was of subordinate role. Furthermore, there was a trade-off between high load carrying capacity and low frictional losses. Thereby, spherical or toroidal geometries on the roller end face featuring a large radius paired with a tapered rib geometry were found to be advantageous in terms of low friction. For larger lubricant film heights and load carrying capacity, spherical or toroidal roller on toroidal rib geometries with medium radii were favorable.


1998 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 427-435 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry Zantopulos

Tests were run on tapered roller bearings under severe operating conditions to promote the incidence of scuffing. This resulted in varying degrees of scuffing damage on the cone (inner race) ribs and/or spherical roller ends of some of the bearings. These were then examined using both the optical microscope and the scanning electron microscope (SEM). In addition, metallographic examinations were conducted on some of the damaged areas. On the basis of these observations, a qualitative model for the onset of scuffing is outlined. The quantitative data obtained from these tests was then analyzed in terms of Blok’s critical temperature criterion and also the scuffing criterion of the form WVx = constant.


Author(s):  
J. A. Karloff ◽  
W. N. Weins ◽  
R. C. Arnold

Abstract One of the important components of a tapered roller bearing is the cage. The main function of the cage during operation is to maintain roller spacing. Although being one of the more complicated parts of a tapered roller bearing, historically, very little specific engineering has been published to provide a design basis for the tapered roller bearing cage. This work analyzed specifically, the cages from tapered roller bearings as used in the railway industry. As the load carrying requirements for railcars have increased, the size of bearing has also increased. Although cage dimensions have increased with bearing size, little specific engineering has been published to document the effect the change in size has on the durability of the larger cages. Testing was conducted to determine the amount of stress induced on the cage due to the vibration environment of a tapered roller bearing used in rail service. Cages evaluated were steel cages from 6 ½ × 12 and 7 × 12 tapered roller bearings and a plastic cage from a 6 ½ × 12 bearing. The natural frequencies of the cages were determined and then compared to the exciting frequencies of the bearings. Vibrations, internal and external to the bearing were measured at various simulated train speeds. The magnitude and frequencies of these excitation vibrations were input into the finite element modeling software, ALGOR®, to find the response of the cage. It was found that the stresses generated in the small end cage pocket of larger 7 × 12 steel cages were as much as twice that of the 6 ½ × 12 steel cages. The stress generated at the pocket of the 6 ½ × 12 plastic cage was smaller than the 6 ½ × 12 steel cage.


2017 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 276
Author(s):  
Krisztián Deák ◽  
Imre Kocsis

Tapered roller element bearings are generally applied in machines and transmission gearboxes. In manufacturing outer ring, inner ring and the rollers usually suffer damages. It is a challenging task to reveal and classify the defects. This paper presents an efficient method for fault classification by support vector machines. The faults on the bearing parts created by laser beam machine have similar shape and surface topography as the grinding faults from the manufacturing process. Vibration signature is collected by sensitive transducer and high resolution data acquisition unit. A test-rig is constructed to model the circumstances of the operation of the built-in tapered roller bearings. Moreover, test-rig is planned with the aim to mitigate the harmful vibration components from the environment that influence the precision of the vibration measurement. Feature extraction is executed by wavelet decomposition. Decomposition level is determined by FFT considering the structural frequencies of the bearing elements. The proper wavelet is selected by the Energy-to-Shannon Entropy criteria from Daubechies and Symlet wavelet families. The fault classification is done by R Cran software using support vector machine classifiers. Time domain parameters of the vibration signature such as kurtosis, skewness, crest factor and range are provided to the classifier. Classification rates are high enough to ensure the efficiency of the method in all cases in the study.


Author(s):  
I Bercea ◽  
D Nélias ◽  
S Cretu

A method to determine the optimum value of the initial axial compression or preload between two tapered roller bearings has been described in Part 1 of this paper. The optimization consists in maximizing the fatigue life of the bearing arrangement. The method is applied here to the transfer shaft of an automobile automatic transaxle, and the results are analysed. Numerical results show the importance of an adequate axial compression to ensure a maximum bearing arrangement reliability for a complex cycle of operating conditions in terms of load and speed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 157 ◽  
pp. 106876
Author(s):  
Justino A.O. Cruz ◽  
Pedro M.T. Marques ◽  
Jorge H.O. Seabra ◽  
Ramiro C. Martins

Author(s):  
B. R. Nichols ◽  
R. L. Fittro ◽  
C. P. Goyne

Many high-speed, rotating machines across a wide range of industrial applications depend on fluid film bearings to provide both static support of the rotor and to introduce stabilizing damping forces into the system through a developed hydrodynamic film wedge. Reduced oil supply flow rate to the bearings can cause cavitation, or a lack of a fully developed film layer, at the leading edge of the bearing pads. Reducing oil flow has the well-documented effects of higher bearing operating temperatures and decreased power losses due to shear forces. While machine efficiency may be improved with reduced lubricant flow, little experimental data on its effects on system stability and performance can be found in the literature. This study looks at overall system performance of a test rig operating under reduced oil supply flow rates by observing steady-state bearing performance indicators and baseline vibrational response of the shaft. The test rig used in this study was designed to be dynamically similar to a high-speed industrial compressor. It consists of a 1.55 m long, flexible rotor supported by two tilting pad bearings with a nominal diameter of 70 mm and a span of 1.2 m. The first bending mode is located at approximately 5,000 rpm. The tiling-pad bearings consist of five pads in a vintage, flooded bearing housing with a length to diameter ratio of 0.75, preload of 0.3, and a load-between-pad configuration. Tests were conducted over a number of operating speeds, ranging from 8,000 to 12,000 rpm, and bearing loads, while systematically reducing the oil supply flow rates provided to the bearings under each condition. For nearly all operating conditions, a low amplitude, broadband subsynchronous vibration pattern was observed in the frequency domain from approximately 0–75 Hz. When the test rig was operated at running speeds above its first bending mode, a distinctive subsynchronous peak emerged from the broadband pattern at approximately half of the running speed and at the first bending mode of the shaft. This vibration signature is often considered a classic sign of rotordynamic instability attributed to oil whip and shaft whirl phenomena. For low and moderate load conditions, the amplitude of this 0.5x subsynchronous peak increased with decreasing oil supply flow rate at all operating speeds. Under the high load condition, the subsynchronous peak was largely attenuated. A discussion on the possible sources of this subsynchronous vibration including self-excited instability and pad flutter forced vibration is provided with supporting evidence from thermoelastohydrodynamic (TEHD) bearing modeling results. Implications of reduced oil supply flow rate on system stability and operational limits are also discussed.


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