gearcutter
Industrial
- May 11, 2005
- 683
I'm in the middle of a gearbox failure investigation and have come across a type of plain journal bearing that I've never seen or heard of before.
The OEM calls it a 'Dual Slide' or 'Double Sliding' Plain Bearing. Rather than the bearing element being fixed (like the mains or big ends on a crankshaft) the bearings I'm looking at have elements that are free to rotate, they are not fixed by either pins/tabs or by the use of an interference fit.
Has anyone heard of such a bearing?
I'm having trouble understanding how a hydrodynamic oil film can be developed or even maintained if no relative motion is possible due to the fact that one of the members is not fixed as is normally the case.
These bearings, by the way, are the focus of the investigation due to a series of catastrophic failures.
Ron Volmershausen
Brunkerville Engineering
Newcastle Australia
The OEM calls it a 'Dual Slide' or 'Double Sliding' Plain Bearing. Rather than the bearing element being fixed (like the mains or big ends on a crankshaft) the bearings I'm looking at have elements that are free to rotate, they are not fixed by either pins/tabs or by the use of an interference fit.
Has anyone heard of such a bearing?
I'm having trouble understanding how a hydrodynamic oil film can be developed or even maintained if no relative motion is possible due to the fact that one of the members is not fixed as is normally the case.
These bearings, by the way, are the focus of the investigation due to a series of catastrophic failures.
Ron Volmershausen
Brunkerville Engineering
Newcastle Australia