An Introduction To Vibration Analysis Theory and Practice
An Introduction To Vibration Analysis Theory and Practice
An Introduction To Vibration Analysis Theory and Practice
to
Vibration Analysis
Theory and
Practice
An overview of…
Various Maintenance Methods
¾ Breakdown
¾ Preventive
¾ Predictive
¾ Reliability centered (Proactive)
Vibration analysis
¾ What is machine vibration
¾ Measuring and analyzing vibration
¾ The BIG 4
Why do machines stop running?
Component failures:
¾ Failed bearings
¾ Broken fan blades
¾ Seized couplings
¾ And the list goes on…
Why Question Existing
Maintenance Practices?
Minimize failures:
¾ Balance and align machines
¾ Improved maintenance practices
¾ Clean lubricants
Disadvantages:
¾ Secondary costs of failure (10X$)
¾ High downtime
¾ Large spare parts inventory
¾ Worker safety issues
Preventive Maintenance
Advantages:
¾ No surprise downtime
¾ No unexpected failures
¾ No secondary damage
¾ All maintenance is planned
¾ Sounds great!
Proactive Maintenance
“Fix it once, fix it right!”
¾ Also known as “reliability centered maintenance” and
“precision maintenance”
¾ Change machine design, purchasing and maintenance procedures to
reduce failures and increase machine reliability
¾ Precision balancing, laser alignment, etc.
What technology is available
Condition monitoring:
¾ Vibration analysis
¾ Oil analysis
¾ Wear particle analysis
¾ Thermography
¾ Ultrasound
¾ Steam Trap
Which Technology to use?
Infrared Thermography
15%
Ultrasonic 10%
5% 45%
Motor Current
Vibration Analysis
10%
15% %
Steam Trap
Oil
Period = 1/Frequency
Fan speed = 5 Hz or 300 RPM
Increase the Frequency
¾ The fan is now going twice as
fast.
¾ Fan speed = 10 Hz or
600 RPM
The ‘Amplitude’
Rub Imbalance
New vibration = 10 x 8 = 80 Hz
8 blades x 10 revolutions/second
The ‘Spectrum’
Spectrum - Examples
5 Hz = 300 RPM
5 Hz
FFT
10 Hz = 600 RPM
10 Hz
FFT
A More Complex Spectrum
Rub Imbalance
10 Hz
FFT
80 Hz
Bearing faults
Looseness
The Big 4
¾ Imbalance
¾ Misalignment
¾ Looseness
¾ Faulty Bearings
Imbalance
What causes “Imbalance”?
¾ A heavy spot along the shaft
¾ Causes high vibration and premature bearing failure
¾ Your vbSeries data collector can correct imbalance
Misalignment
What is “Misalignment”?
¾ Definition: “The shaft center-lines are not collinear”
¾ Can be detected in vibration signature
¾ Corrected with dial indicators and lasers
¾ Also cause of high vibration, and thus bearing damage
Looseness
¾ Rotating looseness
- excessive clearance
between rotation &
stationary parts
6204 BPFO
Aux Comp C7 - Mntg Base #1 - Vertical - Acc Time 800 ms
17/08/1999 14:02:15
O/All 2.235 m/s/s rms
1.6
1.2
resonates. 1
m/s/s rms
0.8
6204 BPFO
0.6
6204 BPFO
6204 BPFO
6204 BPFO
0.4
0.2
April 26
Where do I mount the Sensor?
¾ The sensor is
commonly attached
using a magnet.
Mounting the sensor
¾ Proper mounting
is very important.
¾ “Repeatability” is
essential.
¾ Good “mechanical
transmission path”
from the bearing.
Repeatability
¾ Vibration changes
when the speed and
load change.
1.2
0.8
m/s/s rms
0.6
0.4
0.2
15
10
-5
-10
m/s/s rms
-15
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
ms
6/03/2000 12:27:05 O/All 5.982 m/s/s rms <set RPM> <add note>
0.01
0.005
peak-peak
-0.005
mm peak-
-0.01
-0.015
3.5
2.5
mm/s rms
1.5
0.5
0
12/06/1998 1:28:20 10/07/1998 1:32:32 14/08/1998 1:23:53 11/09/1998 1:25:20
Velocity
What does it mean…..?
®
¾ ASCENT® removes the
guesswork.
Reality Check!
Predictive maintenance:
¾ Monitoring machines regularly with
repeatable results requires discipline
¾ Not all machines can be monitored
¾ Some machines cannot be monitored
frequently enough
¾ Technologies are not perfect
¾ Recommendations are not always followed
¾ Some machines will still fail until analysis
experience grows
Normal Fatigue
Infant
Service Life & Failure
Probability of Failure Mortality
Time