TOPIC 4 Bearing
TOPIC 4 Bearing
TOPIC 4 Bearing
TOPIC 4 : BEARING
Prepared by:
Mr. Roslan bin Hashim
Mechanical Engineering Department
Ungku Omar Polytechnic
A bearing is a machine element that constrains
relative motion and reduces friction
between moving parts to only the desired
motion.
The design of the bearing may, for example,
provide for free linear movement of the moving
part or for free rotation around a fixed axis; or,
it may prevent a motion by controlling
the vectors of normal forces that bear on the
moving parts. ROLLING
ELEMENT
INNER RACE
OUTER RACE
WHAT AND TYPES OF BEARINGS
HIDRODYNAMIC BEARING (JOURNAL BEARING)
There are at least 6 common application of bearing:
Plain bearing also known by the specific styles:
bushing, journal bearing, sleeve bearing, rifle bearing
Rolling-element bearing such as ball bearings and
roller bearings
Jewel bearing in which the load is carried by rolling
the axle slightly off-center
Fluid bearing in which the load is carried by a gas or
liquid
Magnetic bearing in which the load is carried by
a magnetic field
Flexure bearing in which the motion is supported by
a load element which bends.
Plain bearing Roller bearing Magnetic bearing Flexure bearing
External factors
The service life of the bearing is affected by many parameters
that are not controlled by the bearing manufacturers. For
example, bearing mounting, temperature, exposure to external
environment, lubricant cleanliness and electrical currents
through bearings etc. High frequency PWM inverters can induce
currents in a bearing, which can be suppressed by the use
of ferrite chokes.
The temperature and terrain of the micro-surface will determine
the amount of friction by the touching of solid parts.
Certain elements and fields reduce friction while increasing
speeds.
Strength and mobility help determine the amount of load the
bearing type can carry.
Alignment factors can play a damaging role in wear and tear, yet
overcome by computer aid signaling and non-rubbing bearing
types, such as magnetic levitation or air field pressure.
Rolling element bearings
Rolling element bearing life is determined by
load, temperature, maintenance, lubrication,
material defects, contamination, handling,
installation and other factors.
These factors can all have a significant effect
on bearing life. For example, the service life of
bearings in one application was extended
dramatically by changing how the bearings were
stored before installation and use, as vibrations
during storage caused lubricant failure even when
the only load on the bearing was its own weight; the
resulting damage is often false brinelling.
Plain bearings
For plain bearings, some materials give much
longer life than others. Some of the John
Harrison clocks still operate after hundreds of
years because of the lignum vitae wood employed
in their construction, whereas his metal clocks are
seldom run due to potential wear.
Flexure bearings
Flexure bearings rely on elastic properties of a
material. Flexure bearings bend a piece of
material repeatedly. Some materials fail after
repeated bending, even at low loads, but careful
material selection and bearing design can make
flexure bearing life indefinite.
Composite bearings
Depending on the customized specifications
(backing material and PTFE compounds),
composite bearings can operate up to 30 years
without maintenance.
Speed
Load
MOUNTING AND DISMOUNTING OF BEARINGS
The fundamental prerequisite for the correct
mounting and dismounting of bearings is
cleanliness of working site, tools, all components of
bearing arrangement, lubricant and bearings
themselves. Any contamination from foreign matter
will result in rapid deterioration of the bearings.
MOUNTING OF BEARINGS
Prepare all the equipment, parts and the necessary tools before
mounting. Ensure that they are clean. Bearings are supplied in
protective packages and should not be taken out earlier than
immediately before mounting so that they do not become dirty.