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Bearings and Lubrication to Maintenance Bearings

Bearings and Lubrication to Maintenance Bearings

Jun 21,2018

Bearings and Lubrication to Maintenance Bearings

Bearings and lubrication, when the bearing is working, there must be sufficient lubrication. It is in order to ensure the effective and reliable operation of the bearing. 
bearings and lubrication

Packing

Some bearings use a thick grease for lubrication, push it into the gaps between the bearing surfaces, also known as packing. Hold the grease in place by a plastic, leather, or rubber gasket that covers the inside and outside edges of the bearing race to keep the grease from escaping.


Bearings may also be packed with other materials. Historically, the wheels on railroad cars used sleeve bearings packed with waste or lose scraps of cotton or wool fiber soaked in oil. Then later used solid pads of cotton.

Ring oiler

You can lubricate bearings by a metal ring that rides loosely on the central rotating shaft of the bearing. The ring hangs down into a chamber containing lubricating oil. As the bearing rotates, viscous adhesion draws oil up the ring and onto the shaft. Where the oil migrates into the bearing to lubricate it. Fling off excess oil and collects in the pool again.

Splash lubrication

Some machines contain a pool of lubricant in the bottom, with gears partially immersed in the liquid, or crank rods that can swing down into the pool as the device operates. The spinning wheels fling oil into the air around them, while the crank rods slap at the surface of the oil. Splashing it randomly on the interior surfaces of the engine. Some small internal combustion engines specifically contain special plastic flinger wheels that randomly scatter oil around the interior of the mechanism.

Pressure lubrication

For high speed and high power machines, a loss of lubricant can result in rapid bearing heating and damage due to friction. Also in dirty environments, the oil can become contaminated with dust or debris that increases friction. In these applications, a fresh supply of lubricant can be continuously supplied to the bearing and all other contact surfaces, and the excess can be collected for filtration, cooling, and possibly reuse.


Pressure oil


People commonly use pressure oiling in large and complex internal combustion engines in parts of the engine. Because the directly splashed oil can not reach there, such as up into overhead-valve assemblies. Highspeed turbochargers also typically require a pressurized oil system to cool the bearings and keep them from burning up due to the heat from the turbine.

Composite bearings

Design composite bearings with a self-lubricating polite tetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) liner with a laminated metal backing. The PTFE liner offers consistent, controlled friction, as well as durability whilst the metal backing. Ensure the composite bearing is robust and capable of withstanding high loads and stresses throughout its long life. Its design also makes it lightweight-one tenth the weight of a traditional rolling element bearing.