geesamand
Mechanical
- Jun 2, 2006
- 688
I've seen a number of gearboxes with vertical shafts and spherical roller bearing on each end of the gear shaft. These are not mounted on sleeves, so they have essentially the normal factory internal clearance. As you know, that translates to a larger clearance axially - .010 to .060 in many cases.
Sometimes I've seen the end float adjusted to eliminate excess axial slop (allowing the outer race to center on the rollers). Other times I see the end float set to a few thousandths just like a taper roller bearing. I can see how excess end float is risky, but it's also risky to remove so much float that the inboard rollers will always coast and be at risk of skidding.
I do not have context on why these were chosen, so I'd like to hear your thoughts on the matter.
David
Sometimes I've seen the end float adjusted to eliminate excess axial slop (allowing the outer race to center on the rollers). Other times I see the end float set to a few thousandths just like a taper roller bearing. I can see how excess end float is risky, but it's also risky to remove so much float that the inboard rollers will always coast and be at risk of skidding.
I do not have context on why these were chosen, so I'd like to hear your thoughts on the matter.
David