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W H A T ’ S
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D O U G
Machinery & Equipment MRO
June 2022
PRECISION BEARING MAINTENANCE
Definition: Ensuring that all maintenance practices for components associated with the bearing are at a level as to allow the maximum performance of the bearing. These include, installation practices, tools used, skills of millwrights, accuracy of mating components, alignment and balancing of the rotating assembly. BY DOUGLAS MARTIN
What were the lessons? 1.
Good well-trained mechanics know of the issues, but there is no feedback loop due to process or culture.
2.
Invoking precision maintenance would encourage a culture allowing open communication. The job plan was inadequate as it failed to include the least expensive component of the assembly in the BOM. The deficit was written into the job plan for more than 20 years without any apparent review. Whether the omission was due to a lack of knowledge about the assembly, or a cost savings was unknown.
Precision maintenance procurement
Recently. I was in a paper mill rebuild shop and was shown a part which arrived from a distributor. It was asked why the bearing part number on the distributor label was different from the bearing part number on the manufacturer label. That label had the manufacturers’ part number and the mill’s store code. There was one letter missing at the end of the part number and that single number would indicate that a critical component was not included. The millwrights were concerned that they had the correct part. Digging further, the distributor’s ordering system called out the complete manufacturers’ part number and the associated store’s code for the paper mill. As it turns out, the data field for the label printer had a limit to the number of characters and that last letter was left off the part number. In this case, all was good. The information was there to match to the job plan, the stores code matched the job plan and the manufacturers’ part number also matched the job plan. It was a
simple misunderstanding to the correct source for the number. What should be included on the job plan (and the distributors system) should be acceptable substitutes in terms of manufactures and alternate part numbers (for instance bearings with more precise run out than needed for the application).
Condition monitoring
Currently I am working with a user with a clutch assembly that had a recent catastrophic failure, leading to the vessel it was installed on being out of commission for a month. Prior to the failure, vibration monitoring was being done. Variances were noted; however, there was nothing causing an alarm or predicting the catastrophic failure. In this case the vibration readings were being taken during the time the clutch was engaged and, in this case, there is no relative motion between the inner and outer rings. In terms of bearing monitoring, there would be little worthwhile
Photo: Oner 21 / Adobe Stock
L
et's start with a discussion about effects of a lack of precision maintenance. There was a case of an oil refinery that was having a recurrent failure of a fan. The mean time between repair (as the vibe crew would pick out a defect) was six months. Looking back, I remember how proud the vibe team was and how an outer ring of a bearing on display, marked in paint pen $10,000 in savings, to demonstrate their successful diagnostics. When attending the installation, the first question the millwright asked was why was the tapered adapter sleeve so loose on the shaft prior to driving the bearing up the sleeve? Indeed, it easily slid onto the shaft instead of the usual resistance of a typical adapter assembly. Looking at the adapter sleeve and noted what was the correct part number used, in reasonable condition. The part was made in France. This was unusual as I’d never seen a sleeve of this brand made there. It made me wonder if it was counterfeit, turned out, the parts were made in France; however, production ceased by the end of the 1970s. When discussing this with the planner, the job plan simply said “change bearing” but there was no reference to components, including the adapter assembly. Back to the install, this loose sleeve was replaced by a new sleeve and the fan was assembled and was no longer a bad actor.