sensij
Materials
- Sep 4, 2009
- 5
The application is supporting a roller in a miniature forming mill. The speeds and loads are relatively low, 90 RPM and approximately 50 - 200 lb of radial load. The only real axial load comes from mounting preload, the temperature expansion should be insignificant at these sizes and speeds. The rolls are not driven, so at this low speed vibration should be low. Shock loads should also be minimal, although it is possible to create them by mis-setting that roll positions.
The existing design has the roll shaft supported on each end by a full complement drawn cup needle bearing (B-1212), with a needle thrust bearing (TRA-1220) between the working portion of the roll and the needle bearing housing. Lithium grease is used for lubrication, applied a couple times per week. The working portion of the roll is only 1" wide with a 2" diameter, so there should be very little axial deflection under load. The shaft and bearing housing are both hardened tool steel.
Roll position is critical, axial position needs be held to less than 0.001". Radial position under load should also be held better than .001", but is not as critical as axial position. There are top and bottom rolls in a single stand that need to align to this tolerance, and several roll stands in series that also need to align. The housings and ways are ground to 0.0001" tolerances.
In practice, the existing bearing setup does not maintain the position tolerance required, because the needles wear quickly. After a few months of operation (typically, 90-100 hours / week), there is at least a needle diameter's worth of space in the full complement. The drawn cup is pressed into the housing, and has a loose fit on the shaft. More frequent bearing replacements is one option, but I'm hoping for a better option.
As a band-aid, I have started using drawn cups with cage-mounted needles (B-1212). I'm hoping that removing the needle on needle contact will help slow down the needle wear, but it is too soon to know if it is helping yet.
I am considering biting the bullet and doing a housing redesign using tapered roller bearings (A2047 / A2126) instead of the needle cup and needle thrust assembly. Timkin's lifetime calculator rates these as having > 40 million hour life. I understand these need to be preloaded to avoid sliding, but I do not have enough experience to know how to do the preload in a way that maintains positional tolerance through a reasonable life of the bearing. Also, I think I understand from the catalog that if the axial load exceeds e (41%) of the radial load, sliding could also become a problem, but I'm not as sure about that.
Any thoughts out there on whether TRB's are right for this? Having the new housings ground to the tight tolerances required is not cheap, so I'm looking for confidence that this is a path that will yield better results.
Any ideas on why the drawn cup needles wear out so quickly? The load rating suggests they should be fine. Misalignment between the inner and outer housings is the first explanation that comes to my mind, but maybe there is something else I should be looking at?
Thanks,
Jason