Vah1D
Mechanical
- Jan 8, 2016
- 26
Hi eng-tips,
As you see in the pictures, I have a design (basically, a cross-section of the drive end of a simple conveyor). When my boss reviewed it, he recommended using a bearing lock nut on the right-hand side (so right after coupler, pressed against the inner ring of bearing). He said that will keep the bearing inner ring sit against the collars/spacers (shown in gray), eliminating shaft axial play because of bearing clearances. So I thought that's generally a good idea and it made sense.
But am curious is that always necessary? What if I leave it without a locknut, then I have micro inches of shaft movement, is that really going to affect the function or is it something that entirely depends on the application. So in some cases, it might be fine to have some play, but let's say in a machine spindle you want to eliminate all the play so you should be using it.
Is there any other reason to use locknut in this situation?
Any help is greatly appreciated!
Vahid
As you see in the pictures, I have a design (basically, a cross-section of the drive end of a simple conveyor). When my boss reviewed it, he recommended using a bearing lock nut on the right-hand side (so right after coupler, pressed against the inner ring of bearing). He said that will keep the bearing inner ring sit against the collars/spacers (shown in gray), eliminating shaft axial play because of bearing clearances. So I thought that's generally a good idea and it made sense.
But am curious is that always necessary? What if I leave it without a locknut, then I have micro inches of shaft movement, is that really going to affect the function or is it something that entirely depends on the application. So in some cases, it might be fine to have some play, but let's say in a machine spindle you want to eliminate all the play so you should be using it.
Is there any other reason to use locknut in this situation?
Any help is greatly appreciated!
Vahid