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Part of my job is to carry out benchmarking surveys at clients sites. This survey,
referred to as the Lubrication Program Development Phase I, is a birds-eye view of the lubrication practices at a site. As consultants, we benchmark the site using a questionnaire of approximately 230 yes/no weighted questions covering 12 different categories. A spider diagram is then generated to show performance in each of the categories.
First Impressions
There are a few things I look for immediately when going on-site, which give me a good idea of where the customers lubrication program stands. These include the presence, or lack thereof, of lubrication program performance charts, the setup of the oil storeroom and what grease is being used in fan bearings. The latter is the subject of this article.
Many people make the mistake of using a multiservice grease in their fan bearings and other high-speed bearings. This is not best practice due to the high rotational speed of these bearings. The problem is that the viscosity of the base oil used in a multiservice grease is typically 150 or 220 cSt at 40C. Generally speaking, for the same load (torque) on the bearing, as the rotational speed increases the viscosity should decrease. The higher viscosity base oil of a multiservice grease could lead to overheating, premature degradation of the grease and possible damage to the bearing.
Determining Viscosity
Lets look at an example of a fan Im currently working on: a 15 hp motor, running at 1,750 rpm is driving a fan through a belt drive with a one-to-one reduction. The bearings on the fan have a pitch diameter of 50 mm. Various methods are available for determining the correct viscosity to use, but the one I used calls for a desirable operating-temperature viscosity of 19 cSt. The operating temperature of the bearing was estimated at 60C. Using a viscosity-reference chart, this approximates to a desirable base-oil viscosity of 50 cSt at 40C. Moving up to the next grade reaches a required base-oil viscosity of 68 cSt at 40C. Getting a grease with such a low viscosity base-oil is not an easy task, but 100 cSt (an electric motor grease) as opposed to 150 or 220 cSt (a multiservice grease) remains the better option. That was the scientific rationalization. Now consider a more common-sense view. A motor driving a fan provides a certain torque at a specific speed that can be quantified in horsepower or kilowatts. Assuming that it is a directly coupled fan or a one-to-one belt drive (a typical application), then the fan absorbs the same torque, minus negligible losses in the belt or coupling, at the same speed. It stands to reason that the fan bearings are carrying a load similar to those in the motor and are probably going to the same size. So why use a different lubricant? Ideally, the same grease should be used in high-speed bearings and electric motors.
Now this is where problems can occur. In most cases, the grease used in electric motor bearings has a polyurea thickener. If a multiservice grease is being used in fan bearings, it will typically have a lithium-complex thickener. Mixing polyurea and lithium complex-based greases may cause bearing failures because some of these thickeners are incompatible. Therefore, the options are to either introduce a new grease into the lubricant store room or purge the fan bearings and use polyureabased electric motor grease in the fan bearings. Purging can be accomplished in two ways: by opening the bearing and cleaning out the old grease (the preferred but often impractical method), or by refilling the bearing with the new grease at frequent intervals until all the old grease is removed. The second method is probably acceptable for slow-rotating bearings, such as conveyor bearings, where the risk of overheating due to the overfilling of the grease cavity is low, but for high-speed bearings, this is risky. My preference is to invest in a new grease compatible with the existing grease in the fan bearings, but one with the lower base oil viscosity. If a multiservice lithium complex-based grease is being used in fan bearings, then one should look for a lithium complex-based electric motor grease.
The following are 8 check points to minimize fan noise. 1. System Impedance Higher airflow will create higher noise level. Likewise, the higher system impedance created by the system, the higher is required in order to achieve the cooling effect. That is, users need to reduce the system impedance as low as possib order to achieve the least noise of airflow.
2. Flow Disturbance The turbulent air generated by the obstructions along the path of airflow will raise the system noise. Therefore, users h avoid any obstructions in the critical inlet and outlet area as much as possible. 3. Fan Speed As you know, a higher speed fan will generate greater noise compared to a low speed fan. Users have to try their best choose a lower speed fan as much as possible.
4. Fan Size A larger size fan will generate a much lower noise level then a smaller size fan does while creating the same airflow. U shall try to use larger fan with lower speed if space is allowed.
5. Temperature Rise Airflow is inversely proportional related to the allowable temperature increase in a system. A little change in the allowab temperature rise will lead to a significant change in the airflow requirement. If there is a little compromise to the limit im on allowable temperature rise, there will be a considerably less amount of airflow required. It will lead to remarkably reduction in the noise level. 6. Vibration and Resonance We recommend using some soft and flexible isolator to avoid vibration transmission.
7. Voltage The higher voltage applied to the fan; the higher vibration it will generate as will as rpm, Correspondingly, it will create a higher noise level.
8. Fan Design Users have to choose reliable fans to avoid higher acoustic noise caused by improper mechanical and electrical design the fan.
The friction contact between sleeve bearing and the shaft is a face friction. The face friction will create higher noise levels and temperature. The higher the temperature caused by the friction, the greater the possibility foroil leakage. This causes the contact of the bearing to become rough and dry when the oil leaks after a certain period time. Furthermore, the uneven contact usually results in high temperature, abnormal noise and this can cause a malfunction on the fan. The lifespan ofsleeve bearing fan is approximately 20K to 30K hours or 1/2 of the lifespan of ball bearing fans.
1. high cost 2. unregular rolling is larger while the motor spinning at high spee easier to create vibration 3. big vibration and big noise 1. low life expectancy 2. face to face friction and easily to lead abrasion 3. material is softer 1. the lubrication is not good while low speed spinning
Sleeve bearing
Hydro bearing
In order to satisfy the requirement of low cost, long life expectancy, high stability and high speed spinning, hydro bearing is the best choice.
According to the test result, obviously the hydro bearing can reach similar stability of ball bearing. For example. That is the hydro bearing already obtains the requirement of long life expectancy for computer system, telecommunication, measurement, and medical equipments. Compare to ball bearing, hydro bearing is much competitive because of lower noise, lower cost.
Sintered hydro bearing: The progress of hydro bearing processing is owing to the development of sintering technology. Under high pressure condition, to solid metal powder to a certain shape and sintered at high temperature. Through the processing procedure, it will generate many small holes among the metal powder. The total cubic content of the hole is around 15~30% of the bearing itself. Furthermore, to fill the lubricant into the holes by vacuum process. Besides, there is a recycle oil storage sink design on the bearing to ensure the constant operation of the lubricant. Even the fan is not rotating, the special design of hydro bearing can ensure the lubrication. Even at the beginning of starting, the shaft will not be dry. While the fan is at rest, the Capillarity effect will generate a lubrication membrane between shaft and bearing so that the lubricant will not leak out. When the fan starts rotating, the slight pressure