Berry's vibration diagnostic chart [Sound and Vibration, Sept.1990, pg.17] says that type B mechanical looseness causes a truncation of the time waveform. The illustrated frequency-amplitude spectrum for type B mechanical looseness shows 1X-11X peaks plus 0.5X ,1.5X and 2.5X. He says "Type B is normally generated by improper fit between component parts which will cause many harmonics due to nonlinear responses of loose parts to dynamic forces from the rotor...Type B is often caused by a bearing liner loose in the cap, excessive clearance in either a sleeve or rolling element bearings, or a loose impeller on the shaft. Phase is often unstable and may vary widely from one measurement to the next, particularly if rotor shifts position from one startup to next...looseness will often
cause subharmonic multiples of 1/2 or 1/3 times RPM...[and]will often allow excessive vibration for relatively small unbalance or misalignment."
Continuous or intermittent rubbing between bearing, shaft, impeller components would seem to be one possible manifestation of mechanical looseness as suggested by electricpete. Constraint of any periodic motion whether rotational or linear seems to be the key to time-amplitude waveform truncation which may or may not entail physical contact or rubbing. For instance, in fluid film bearings, truncation of transient rotor displacement by an impenetrable bearing fluid squeeze-film might truncate the 1X waveform without allowing any physical contact between the shaft journal and the bearing wear surface.
A paper by F.F.Ehrich (not presently onhand) discusses "beat-frequency truncation" of vibration waveforms and mentions some interactions to produce other spectral peaks that are not represented in Berry's Type B mechanical looseness spectrum.
looseness spectrum