jsalas1
Mechanical
- Jun 25, 2012
- 6
Hi all, longtime lurker, first time poster.
I have a situation which is made more difficult in that I am getting only word of mouth from two middle-men, but I will try to be as detailed (or concise) as possible.
We have a customer who has two feed pumps, both KSB HGC 3/10 (size 3 pump, 10 stages). Both pumps meet rate but one of the pumps (lets call it the south pump) continually wipes bearings and has had multiple occasions where the balance disk has failed. The other pump (call it north pump) runs without issues. My shop repaired both pumps so I'm inclined to believe that we can get to the bottom of this since one of the repairs was successful.
Both pumps are motor driven and coupled via Voith variable speed fluid coupling. The pump cases are center-line mounted and the fluid coupling is floor mounted, which I think is one issue. The techs are aligning the pump and motor under a cold condition. My gut tells me they should align it, run the pump to warm up both the case and coupling, and then re-align it. I don't know much about these fluid couplings so they may be more forgiving than that but it seems unlikely that a boiler feed pump could run hot when it is aligned cold. In addition, the techs are starting the pump with the fluid coupling 85% engaged, which means it spins right up and I wish they would just get rid of the dang thing (the fluid coupling not the tech).
Furthermore, the techs recently found that the north pump has dowels which encourages the case to grow away from the driver. These dowels are on the drive-end of the pump at the centerline. The south pump does not have these dowels, which I think is obviously an issue. By not doweling the south pump, I would think the case is allowed to grow axially in both directions instead of favoring one, which I think could work in concert with the fact that the train is cold aligned. I don't like either of those things and yet somehow that is procedure.
The last thing and the reason I posted this thread is that the bearing lube oil is discolored and eventually both bearings will get wiped (drive-end goes first). These pumps have a common bearing design that can be run in multiple configurations (pressure fed, oil rings, flooded housing), but these pumps both use oil rings. On both pumps, the bearing temperatures (drive-end and non drive-end) don't exceed 100F during operation. However, the south pump bearing oil is discolored and eventually the bearings rub. I believe the techs are over-filling the reservoirs which is causing too much drag for the oil rings to be effective, but I'm not sure that would discolor the oil or cause a bearing rub. They have done contamination checks and they were clear. They also found that the bearing housings we're not square with the case so they squared them up but it changed nothing. A vibe tech also went out and measured vibration, I'm not sure where but his results were that the dominating response was synchronous and there was a slight broadband response around 2X, but maybe not enough to be conclusive. I can share photos to provide a visual aid but it seems I'm limited to one per post.
Thoughts and suggestions are welcome and I apologize for the novel. If you have made it to this point kudos to you and thanks for your attention.
I have a situation which is made more difficult in that I am getting only word of mouth from two middle-men, but I will try to be as detailed (or concise) as possible.
We have a customer who has two feed pumps, both KSB HGC 3/10 (size 3 pump, 10 stages). Both pumps meet rate but one of the pumps (lets call it the south pump) continually wipes bearings and has had multiple occasions where the balance disk has failed. The other pump (call it north pump) runs without issues. My shop repaired both pumps so I'm inclined to believe that we can get to the bottom of this since one of the repairs was successful.
Both pumps are motor driven and coupled via Voith variable speed fluid coupling. The pump cases are center-line mounted and the fluid coupling is floor mounted, which I think is one issue. The techs are aligning the pump and motor under a cold condition. My gut tells me they should align it, run the pump to warm up both the case and coupling, and then re-align it. I don't know much about these fluid couplings so they may be more forgiving than that but it seems unlikely that a boiler feed pump could run hot when it is aligned cold. In addition, the techs are starting the pump with the fluid coupling 85% engaged, which means it spins right up and I wish they would just get rid of the dang thing (the fluid coupling not the tech).
Furthermore, the techs recently found that the north pump has dowels which encourages the case to grow away from the driver. These dowels are on the drive-end of the pump at the centerline. The south pump does not have these dowels, which I think is obviously an issue. By not doweling the south pump, I would think the case is allowed to grow axially in both directions instead of favoring one, which I think could work in concert with the fact that the train is cold aligned. I don't like either of those things and yet somehow that is procedure.
The last thing and the reason I posted this thread is that the bearing lube oil is discolored and eventually both bearings will get wiped (drive-end goes first). These pumps have a common bearing design that can be run in multiple configurations (pressure fed, oil rings, flooded housing), but these pumps both use oil rings. On both pumps, the bearing temperatures (drive-end and non drive-end) don't exceed 100F during operation. However, the south pump bearing oil is discolored and eventually the bearings rub. I believe the techs are over-filling the reservoirs which is causing too much drag for the oil rings to be effective, but I'm not sure that would discolor the oil or cause a bearing rub. They have done contamination checks and they were clear. They also found that the bearing housings we're not square with the case so they squared them up but it changed nothing. A vibe tech also went out and measured vibration, I'm not sure where but his results were that the dominating response was synchronous and there was a slight broadband response around 2X, but maybe not enough to be conclusive. I can share photos to provide a visual aid but it seems I'm limited to one per post.
Thoughts and suggestions are welcome and I apologize for the novel. If you have made it to this point kudos to you and thanks for your attention.