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Staying ahead of bearing failure

March 1, 2000
A little know-how and some portable instruments can move bearing analysis out of the lab and into the field. Why wait until machinery screeches to a halt when you can set things right early on

At the onset, defects in rolling element bearings can be inconspicuous. But bearings run hard, and minor flaws can rapidly escalate. With the right training and equipment, however, you can spot those easy-to-miss symptoms before they do serious harm.

Vibrations, anyone?

Bearing fault detection has came a long way since the days when mechanics used to check for flaws by placing a screwdriver tip on the bearing cap while pressing the handle against the bone structure behind their ear.

Portable vibration measuring equipment allowed a more technological approach, and troubleshooters could now see the vibrations they used to listen for. Not surprisingly, however, there were still quite a few bugs to work out.

Some people began to connect bearing failure to sensor resonance; flaws in the bearing tend to generate energy that can excite the natural frequency of accelerometers. Operators would single out a bad bearing based on such a response. Sometimes they were right and sometimes they were wrong. If, for example, other parts of the machinery created high-frequency vibrations and caused a similar accelerometer reaction, a "blameless" bearing could get replaced.

The next step in the progression was to take velocity measurements of spinning bearings and look for specific frequencies generated by individual bearing elements. This improved accuracy, but even the best technicians would miss things when very slow-rotating bearings were involved.

Today, thanks to better instruments and special functions like enveloping algorithms, bearing analysis accuracy is nearly 100%. (Enveloping algorithms are formulas that sum the harmonics in a signal, and suppress the noise.) A few bad bearings still get misdiagnosed, but they are rare, and there are ways to find even these.

Get analytical

Velocity measurements indicate the speed of vibrations that result from bearing flaws and roughness. Velocity, rather than acceleration, is best when low-frequency vibrations are expected, typically below 60 Hz. A common way of obtaining velocity is by integrating the output of an accelerometer. The measurement is further enhanced by data collectors with enough dynamic range to pick up faint signals, such as those generated by rolling elements passing over flaws in the races, or by defects in a ball or cage.

One problem, however, is that when higher frequencies are a concern, velocity levels don't usually climb very high, even with very large, deliberately induced flaws. When bearing elements vibrate and displace because of defects, they don't generally get a lot of speed going, even though the changes in speed can be abrupt.

In one case, a substantial flaw only triggered a velocity response of 0.0027 ips (at around 107 Hz) at a shaft speed of 1,800 rpm – although far from invisible, it wasn't enough to get caretakers anxious about performing maintenance. Now consider the same bearing with a shaft speed of 180 rpm, as on a paper machine. The amplitude will read a mere 0.00027 ips for a bearing that should be replaced. Clearly something else is needed to evaluate the condition of rolling element bearings.

Extra refined

In the last few years, the mathematical signal processing method known as enveloping has been incorporated into portable data collectors. This computational technique, initially developed in Europe back in the 1970's, used to be limited to lab analysis.

Enveloping uses high-pass filters to collect the signals generated by rolling bearings with flawed rings, cages or rollers. Mathematical manipulation enhances the repetitive signal components, while suppressing random signals. The process then sums the energy, passes it through a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT), demodulates it, and presents it in the selected frequency range as an enveloped acceleration (gE) spectrum.

By using the enveloped signals coupled with demodulation, the resultant FFT can have a starting point of zero without any electronic "ski slope" as seen in velocity measurements, and without the roll-off at the low end of an accelerometer's range.

Using an enveloped Fourier transform brings out very low signals, but the transform itself also provides positive evidence of bearing damage. A rotating bearing free of defects translates into a sine wave. With damage present, the sine wave is clipped or truncated, giving it a Fourier transform consisting of the fundamental frequency plus harmonics. Harmonics in the FFT of a bearing indicate trouble.

Using the enveloping method, it's possible to evaluate bearings rotating very slowly, down to 0.5 rpm. A side benefit is that it can also detect looseness. If the rotating components of a machine are loose, or if the machine itself is loose on its base, the sine wave is again clipped, and shaft speed harmonics crop up in the FFT display.

Field report

One field problem frequently encountered with bearings is contamination of the lubrication system. This can often be detected using a technique that collects signals with an acoustical emissions sensor and processes them with a special algorithm. It lets the engineer "hear," through a visual representation, the acoustic output from rolling elements passing over and crushing contaminants. This signal processing method, called Spectral Emitted Energy (SEE), is also helpful in detecting bearings with insufficient lubrication, where there is slight metal-to-metal contact.

In one situation with a new fan, the bearing became hot enough that it was uncomfortable to touch after operating for just ten minutes. With the bearing running hot, SEE analysis showed the even harmonics of the ball spin frequency at amplitudes standing well above the noise floor. (Why the system displayed only the even harmonics is still a mystery.)

>After replacing the grease pack and purging the system, the fan was run for an hour before collecting another set of SEE data. The ball spin frequencies had smoothed out completely, and the only notable signals were the ball pass frequencies of the outer race. But these were of a low level, and therefore of little concern, likely due to a small amount of contamination embedded in the outer race. Another reading using enveloped acceleration also showed very low amplitudes. A follow-up lab test of the grease revealed minute particles that have yet to be identified.

Robert M. Jones is Principal Applications Engineer with SKF Condition Monitoring, San Diego.

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