VibFrank
Mechanical
- Aug 2, 2005
- 21
Hy,
I try to calculate the stress inside a journal bearing, if the shaft gets into contact with the bearing housing during shocks. I calculated with the formulas of Hertz (cylinder inside cylinder) and I found very low values for the pressure. This results from 1/r1+1/r2 (r1=radius of the shaft=100, r2=radius of journal housing=-100.3) in the numerator of the formula, which becomes very low due to the different signs in the radius. Some questions..
Is the calculation correct because the values are so low ?
Are there other formulas for this problem ?
Is the use of Hertzian pressure allowed for this problem ?
What other calculation/check would you make for this shock-contact-situation ?
I'm concerned, because the values for the pressure are so low for typical journal bearing geometries (radius nearly identical but different sign), that theoretically there would nearly never be problem..
Thanks for your comments
Frank
I try to calculate the stress inside a journal bearing, if the shaft gets into contact with the bearing housing during shocks. I calculated with the formulas of Hertz (cylinder inside cylinder) and I found very low values for the pressure. This results from 1/r1+1/r2 (r1=radius of the shaft=100, r2=radius of journal housing=-100.3) in the numerator of the formula, which becomes very low due to the different signs in the radius. Some questions..
Is the calculation correct because the values are so low ?
Are there other formulas for this problem ?
Is the use of Hertzian pressure allowed for this problem ?
What other calculation/check would you make for this shock-contact-situation ?
I'm concerned, because the values for the pressure are so low for typical journal bearing geometries (radius nearly identical but different sign), that theoretically there would nearly never be problem..
Thanks for your comments
Frank