PFFC - July 2008 - (Page 12) WEB LINES Idler Roller Bearings: Living the Good Long Life? ost bearings are designed for a hard life, expecting to end up on a drive shaft of a high-speed motor with a heavy load. Some bearings, however, end up with a relatively cushy job in the relatively light-duty life as the bearing in an idler roller on a coating line or slitter/rewinder. Note | If you run an extremely high-tension web, like steel or an extra-thick paper product, you likely never think about roller drag, so stop here. People look at me funny when I say you should be able to put in an idler roller and never replace the bearing. To convince yourself of this, get out your favorite engineering handbook and calculate the life expectancy of your bearing based on process rpms and the load from roller weight and web tension. You likely will find an expected life of 10 or even 100 years. These bearing life expectancies may seem unreasonable, but they are achievable if you consider a few real-world factors. Tend to these five factors and you too may see bearings lasting a decade or more. Size | What is the right size idler bearing? The easy answer is the bearing needs to have an inner diameter bigger than your shaft and outer diameter smaller than the roller’s shell. On the plus side, larger idler shafts will have less deflection, but larger bearings will have longer expected life but also more friction, especially in greased, contact seal bearings. Some idlers eliminate the need for large inner diameters by eliminating the through shaft. A small diameter stub shaft can reduce bearing diameter greatly, but the tradeoff is life. I think 3 ⁄4 in. is the place to start on bearing inner diameter unless your idlers are running under extremely light loads. Lubricants | From a low-drag point of view, no lubricant is best, but a bearing with no lubricant will fail quickly. The answer is to use either of the following options. u Use 5%–25% fill with a light oil lubricant. u Avoid petroleum-based lubricant M that doesn’t eventually have a date with the pumppump-pump of a grease gun. Seals | Contact seals add to idler roller friction, yet with no seals, dust and debris will get in and destroy a bearing. Labyrinth seals, where any By Timothy J. Walker Contributing Editor You should be able to put in an idler roller & never replace the bearing. altogether and opt for a PTFEbased, low-viscosity lubricant. For low-tension web handling, just say no to Zerk fittings on idler rollers. A Zerk fitting doesn’t mean a roller will have too much thick grease inside, but I’ve never met a Zerk fitting COMING NEXT MONTH particle must travel a tortuous route to get to the balls in the bearing, are the preferred answer. Some low-drag bearings use a lubricated felt seal to block contamination. Environment | The top environmental questions for bearings are heat, humidity (or lack thereof), ozone (near corona treaters), and contamination (such as near slitting). Sufficient lubrication, non-petroleum lubricants, and labyrinth seals are the answer. Loads | Bearings are good at supporting loads perpendicular to their axis of rotation, but the real world may exert loads in other directions. Undesired side loads may result from an over-muscled roller assembly or from a shell’s thermal expansion. Excessive radial loads may come from thermal expansion differences between high thermal expansion of aluminum shells and relative-to-low-expanding steel bearings. Twisting loads are generated from misalignment of the bearing outer and inner race, usually from overly small shafts. A bearing in a spherical bushing mount can minimize this, or you can use basic engineering to model the shaft and shell deflection and keep the bearing angle mismatch to a minimum (usually less than 1 ⁄4 deg). I would like to thank Cal Couillard of Componex (www.componex.net) and Pete Eggen of Webex (www. webexinc.com) for their valuable discussion in preparing for this WINDING column. I expect, like me, either ESSENTIALS of them would welcome a call from you to discuss your unique idler roller bearing challenges. Web handling expert Tim Walker, president of TJWalker+Assoc., has 20+ years of experience in web processes, education, development, and production problem solving. Contact him at 651-686-5400; tjwalker@tjwa.com; www.webhandling.com. 12 | JULY 2008 WWW.PFFC-ONLINE.COM http://www.componex.net http://www.webexinc.com http://www.webexinc.com http://www.webhandling.com http://WWW.PFFC-ONLINE.COM
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of PFFC - July 2008 PFFC - July 2008 Contents First Glance Calendar of Events From the Editor Web Lines Process Management News Clips Narrow Web & Label Reporter Narrow Web & Label What’s New Products Cover: Special Report Start with Security 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference Printing Partnerships Paper’s Pledge Edible Markers Flexography Exclusive Research: Critical Trends What’s New Products Services Directory Classified Marketplace Advertisers Index Experience Speaks PFFC - July 2008 PFFC - July 2008 - PFFC - July 2008 (Page Cover1) PFFC - July 2008 - PFFC - July 2008 (Page Cover2) PFFC - July 2008 - PFFC - July 2008 (Page 1) PFFC - July 2008 - Contents (Page 2) PFFC - July 2008 - Contents (Page 3) PFFC - July 2008 - First Glance (Page 4) PFFC - July 2008 - First Glance (Page 5) PFFC - July 2008 - First Glance (Page 6) PFFC - July 2008 - First Glance (Page 7) PFFC - July 2008 - Calendar of Events (Page 8) PFFC - July 2008 - Calendar of Events (Page 9) PFFC - July 2008 - From the Editor (Page 10) PFFC - July 2008 - From the Editor (Page 11) PFFC - July 2008 - Web Lines (Page 12) PFFC - July 2008 - Web Lines (Page 13) PFFC - July 2008 - Process Management (Page 14) PFFC - July 2008 - Process Management (Page 15) PFFC - July 2008 - News Clips (Page 16) PFFC - July 2008 - News Clips (Page 17) PFFC - July 2008 - News Clips (Page 18) PFFC - July 2008 - Narrow Web & Label Reporter (Page 19) PFFC - July 2008 - Narrow Web & Label What’s New Products (Page 20) PFFC - July 2008 - Cover: Special Report (Page 21) PFFC - July 2008 - Start with Security (Page 22) PFFC - July 2008 - Start with Security (Page 23) PFFC - July 2008 - Start with Security (Page 24) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI1) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI2) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI3) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI4) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI5) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI6) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI7) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI8) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI9) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI10) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI11) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page TAPPI12) PFFC - July 2008 - 2008 TAPPI PLACE Conference (Page 25) PFFC - July 2008 - Printing Partnerships (Page 26) PFFC - July 2008 - Printing Partnerships (Page 27) PFFC - July 2008 - Printing Partnerships (Page 28) PFFC - July 2008 - Printing Partnerships (Page 29) PFFC - July 2008 - Paper’s Pledge (Page 30) PFFC - July 2008 - Paper’s Pledge (Page 31) PFFC - July 2008 - Paper’s Pledge (Page 32) PFFC - July 2008 - Paper’s Pledge (Page 33) PFFC - July 2008 - Edible Markers (Page 34) PFFC - July 2008 - Edible Markers (Page 35) PFFC - July 2008 - Edible Markers (Page 36) PFFC - July 2008 - Flexography (Page 37) PFFC - July 2008 - Flexography (Page 38) PFFC - July 2008 - Flexography (Page 39) PFFC - July 2008 - Exclusive Research: Critical Trends (Page 40) PFFC - July 2008 - Exclusive Research: Critical Trends (Page 41) PFFC - July 2008 - Exclusive Research: Critical Trends (Page 42) PFFC - July 2008 - Exclusive Research: Critical Trends (Page 43) PFFC - July 2008 - What’s New Products (Page 44) PFFC - July 2008 - What’s New Products (Page 45) PFFC - July 2008 - What’s New Products (Page 46) PFFC - July 2008 - What’s New Products (Page 47) PFFC - July 2008 - Services Directory (Page 48) PFFC - July 2008 - Services Directory (Page 49) PFFC - July 2008 - Services Directory (Page 50) PFFC - July 2008 - Classified Marketplace (Page 51) PFFC - July 2008 - Classified Marketplace (Page 52) PFFC - July 2008 - Classified Marketplace (Page 53) PFFC - July 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 54) PFFC - July 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 55) PFFC - July 2008 - Experience Speaks (Page 56) PFFC - July 2008 - Experience Speaks (Page Cover3) PFFC - July 2008 - Experience Speaks (Page Cover4)
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