454Casull
Mechanical
- Jan 24, 2005
- 11
The rotating shaft is 5/8" with a standard ANSI keyway (3/32"x3/16"). The axial motion of the shaft will be retained with retaining rings in grooves machined in the shaft. The shaft will be held by two R10 bearings spaced about 2.5" apart. All materials to be stainless steel.
The current design (timing belt assembly) has two parallel plates with press-fit holes machined for the bearings so that they can be pressed into the plates. However, I would like to avoid this since it seems that the cost is rather high for the tolerances required for a "proper" fit. The other option I looked into was having separate plates/flanges that bolt into place, with loose-fit bearing holes and using internal retaining rings to keep the bearing axially fixed as it seems the tolerances for a loose fit are easier to achieve than a tight fit - a standard reamer should do it well enough. However, the plate becomes very thick - at least half an inch, to support the bearing and the internal retaining rings.
Anyway, what I'm trying to do is support a 5/8" shaft between two bearings spaced about 2.5" apart, and I'd like to hear your opinion as to what the cheapest/best solution is to locate the bearings.
The current design (timing belt assembly) has two parallel plates with press-fit holes machined for the bearings so that they can be pressed into the plates. However, I would like to avoid this since it seems that the cost is rather high for the tolerances required for a "proper" fit. The other option I looked into was having separate plates/flanges that bolt into place, with loose-fit bearing holes and using internal retaining rings to keep the bearing axially fixed as it seems the tolerances for a loose fit are easier to achieve than a tight fit - a standard reamer should do it well enough. However, the plate becomes very thick - at least half an inch, to support the bearing and the internal retaining rings.
Anyway, what I'm trying to do is support a 5/8" shaft between two bearings spaced about 2.5" apart, and I'd like to hear your opinion as to what the cheapest/best solution is to locate the bearings.