I purchased some babbitt bearing material, and intend to pour it for bearings on engines.
There were several grades of hardness, and picked the hardest grade, which was rated for use on connecting rod bearings.
Babbitt is not cheap, and so I went with what would work in any situation.
For an engine what will run loaded for extended periods of time, softer babbitt should be used in the crankshaft bearings.
I did a design project a few years ago for a stormwater pump station, and there was a debate about replacing the motor bearings, which were very large babbitt units.
The motor rewind shop recommended replacing the bearings, since they were 110 years old.
The actual wear on the bearings was negligable, since the motors run very slowly.
The motor shop said that large babbitt bearings tend to delaminate from the shell over time, and these bearings were showing signs of that.
The delaminated areas will overheat, and then cause further delamination.
We replaced the bearings with turbine-grade babbitt bearings.
These motors were rebuilt because modern motors run at a much higher rpm, which requires a gearbox, and the new motors and gearboxes are not very reliable compared to the old slow-speed motors.
It took five big burly guys to life off one bearing cap, and they struggled with it.
The entire bearing rotates in a ball joint, which I think is very clever.
This is what a journal running in a babbitt bearing looks like after 110 years.
They basically gave the journals a light polishing, since they were still in spec.
The brass/bronze rings drag the oil up to the top of the bearing.
No oil pumps to fail.
There were several grades of hardness, and picked the hardest grade, which was rated for use on connecting rod bearings.
Babbitt is not cheap, and so I went with what would work in any situation.
For an engine what will run loaded for extended periods of time, softer babbitt should be used in the crankshaft bearings.
I did a design project a few years ago for a stormwater pump station, and there was a debate about replacing the motor bearings, which were very large babbitt units.
The motor rewind shop recommended replacing the bearings, since they were 110 years old.
The actual wear on the bearings was negligable, since the motors run very slowly.
The motor shop said that large babbitt bearings tend to delaminate from the shell over time, and these bearings were showing signs of that.
The delaminated areas will overheat, and then cause further delamination.
We replaced the bearings with turbine-grade babbitt bearings.
These motors were rebuilt because modern motors run at a much higher rpm, which requires a gearbox, and the new motors and gearboxes are not very reliable compared to the old slow-speed motors.
It took five big burly guys to life off one bearing cap, and they struggled with it.
The entire bearing rotates in a ball joint, which I think is very clever.
This is what a journal running in a babbitt bearing looks like after 110 years.
They basically gave the journals a light polishing, since they were still in spec.
The brass/bronze rings drag the oil up to the top of the bearing.
No oil pumps to fail.
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