nisqually
Mechanical
- Nov 26, 2002
- 23
Hello,
I am in need of assistance. I am very new at this. I am told a larger than normal key on a shaft must be balanced with some mass added on the other side of the shaft. That's fine. But we are supposed to use a vibration test to verify the shaft is balanced properly. I assume the location of the extra mass would be opposite the key (180 degrees). Someone suggested the 4 run method can be used to verify balance. Can we attach some mass and just look at vibration in/sec in the frequency domain and assume the equipment is balanced if the overall vibration is below, say .11 in/sec- 0 to peak? I don't understand the units of permissible residual unbalance as in Appendix C of ANSI/AMCA 204. I do have a Commtest vb1000-T analyzer available to use.
This test is Monday. What do you suggest? I can't become an expert in a day so I'm looking for practical suggestions if possible.
Nisqually
I am in need of assistance. I am very new at this. I am told a larger than normal key on a shaft must be balanced with some mass added on the other side of the shaft. That's fine. But we are supposed to use a vibration test to verify the shaft is balanced properly. I assume the location of the extra mass would be opposite the key (180 degrees). Someone suggested the 4 run method can be used to verify balance. Can we attach some mass and just look at vibration in/sec in the frequency domain and assume the equipment is balanced if the overall vibration is below, say .11 in/sec- 0 to peak? I don't understand the units of permissible residual unbalance as in Appendix C of ANSI/AMCA 204. I do have a Commtest vb1000-T analyzer available to use.
This test is Monday. What do you suggest? I can't become an expert in a day so I'm looking for practical suggestions if possible.
Nisqually