kingnero
Mechanical
- Aug 15, 2009
- 1,751
I've heard from different people, in different fields, that some of their rotating shafts need demagnetizing.
The crankshaft of large diesel engines for example. I was asked to guess, but apparently I was wrong. I said, because metal swarf could stick to the shaft, and if it were to collect or get into the main bearings (that are shells, not ball bearings) it could cause accellerated wear.
But, it had to do something with the earth's magnetic field. If the shaft were magnetic as well, there could be some opposing force which could lead to an unbalanced crakshaft.
The explanation was rather vague, not much more as I wrote above.
I've heard similar stories from welding and NDT guys on rotating equipment, but no-one was able to explain the actual/full/correct reason behind this.
Any one in the know here?
The crankshaft of large diesel engines for example. I was asked to guess, but apparently I was wrong. I said, because metal swarf could stick to the shaft, and if it were to collect or get into the main bearings (that are shells, not ball bearings) it could cause accellerated wear.
But, it had to do something with the earth's magnetic field. If the shaft were magnetic as well, there could be some opposing force which could lead to an unbalanced crakshaft.
The explanation was rather vague, not much more as I wrote above.
I've heard similar stories from welding and NDT guys on rotating equipment, but no-one was able to explain the actual/full/correct reason behind this.
Any one in the know here?