skfboiler
Industrial
- Mar 19, 2008
- 2
On a typical motor driven fan mounted on rolling element bearngs, does the natural frequency change when the machine reaches its operating speed?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Myrick et al said:Gyroscopic forces and moments acting on an overhung fan wheel can increase the first lateral mode by a big amount—in the authors’ case, by 37.5 percent (by 625 cpm—to 2290 cpm at 2080 rpm from 1668 cpm at rest).
Most non-rotating vibration problems involve symmetric K and C matrix. In that case the K matrix represents conservative forces (associated with energy storage) and the C matrix represents non-conservative (damping associated with energy dissipation) forces.I would have thought that the gyroscopic forces played a larger role in increasing the damping coefficient.
Yes, the mode shape changes. I never said otherwise… in fact showed the changing modeshape in my attachment.Moreover, as the gyroscopic effect effectively changes the reaction axis to the mode shape, would not the mode shape itself change