Hup
Mechanical
- Jan 13, 2006
- 36
Hello bearing folks,
I am trying to measure axial preloading forces between angular contact ball bearings. It is on a simple two-bearing back-to-back spindle with rigid spacers, <=> . My aim is to measure preloading forces during rotation when everything warms up and the preload is expected to change due to thermal expansion.
Now I use a spacer equipped with strain gauges. It should work well in case the bearings can slide freely in the housing (there is initial clearance). Nevertheless it looks like bearing outer rings expand so fast (compared with housing) that they stick in the housing and the preloading force is no more transfered through the spacer.
Is this behaviour normal? I have seen some relatively high-speed aplications that rely on this OR-housing sliding. They don't use spliting the housing and adding a ball cage (obviously because of cost) at spindle's floating end.
Thanks for any response, H-up
I am trying to measure axial preloading forces between angular contact ball bearings. It is on a simple two-bearing back-to-back spindle with rigid spacers, <=> . My aim is to measure preloading forces during rotation when everything warms up and the preload is expected to change due to thermal expansion.
Now I use a spacer equipped with strain gauges. It should work well in case the bearings can slide freely in the housing (there is initial clearance). Nevertheless it looks like bearing outer rings expand so fast (compared with housing) that they stick in the housing and the preloading force is no more transfered through the spacer.
Is this behaviour normal? I have seen some relatively high-speed aplications that rely on this OR-housing sliding. They don't use spliting the housing and adding a ball cage (obviously because of cost) at spindle's floating end.
Thanks for any response, H-up