Publication detail

Influence of rolling elements distance on starvation

KOŠŤÁL, D. ŠPERKA, P. SVOBODA, P. KŘUPKA, I. HARTL, M.

Czech title

Influence of rolling elements distance on starvation

English title

Influence of rolling elements distance on starvation

Type

conference paper

Language

cs

Original abstract

Starvation occurs when lubricant, which is pushed away from the rolling track by rolling element, is unable to re-flow to the track. When time between overrollings or successive elements in bearing is too short, starvation becomes more severe. The effect of rolling elements stance on starvation was studied. All experiments were carried out with steel rollers, glass disc, and mineral base oil (R 834/80) with viscosity of 0.19 Pa/sec. Thickness (of the free layer) seemed to be stable for delay 8 sec. It can be assumed that necessary distance to fully replenish the track is 3.1 m for given conditions and lubricant. This is an abstract of a paper presented at the 2013 STLE Annual Meeting & Exhibition (Detroit, MI 5/5-9/2013).

Czech abstract

Starvation occurs when lubricant, which is pushed away from the rolling track by rolling element, is unable to re-flow to the track. When time between overrollings or successive elements in bearing is too short, starvation becomes more severe. The effect of rolling elements stance on starvation was studied. All experiments were carried out with steel rollers, glass disc, and mineral base oil (R 834/80) with viscosity of 0.19 Pa/sec. Thickness (of the free layer) seemed to be stable for delay 8 sec. It can be assumed that necessary distance to fully replenish the track is 3.1 m for given conditions and lubricant. This is an abstract of a paper presented at the 2013 STLE Annual Meeting & Exhibition (Detroit, MI 5/5-9/2013).

English abstract

Starvation occurs when lubricant, which is pushed away from the rolling track by rolling element, is unable to re-flow to the track. When time between overrollings or successive elements in bearing is too short, starvation becomes more severe. The effect of rolling elements stance on starvation was studied. All experiments were carried out with steel rollers, glass disc, and mineral base oil (R 834/80) with viscosity of 0.19 Pa/sec. Thickness (of the free layer) seemed to be stable for delay 8 sec. It can be assumed that necessary distance to fully replenish the track is 3.1 m for given conditions and lubricant. This is an abstract of a paper presented at the 2013 STLE Annual Meeting & Exhibition (Detroit, MI 5/5-9/2013).

Keywords in Czech

Ball bearings; EHL; Replenishment; Rolling bearings; Starving ehl

Keywords in English

Ball bearings; EHL; Replenishment; Rolling bearings; Starving ehl

RIV year

2013

Released

09.05.2013

Publisher

Curran Associates, Inc. ( Dec 2013 )

Location

Detroit

ISBN

978-1-62993-289-7

Book

Society of Tribologists & Lubrication Engineers Annual Meeting & Exhibition 2013 / Proceedings of a meeting held 5-9 May 2013, Detroit, Michigan, USA.

Edition number

1

Pages from–to

296–298

Pages count

3

BIBTEX


@inproceedings{BUT106817,
  author="David {Košťál} and Petr {Šperka} and Petr {Svoboda} and Ivan {Křupka} and Martin {Hartl},
  title="Influence of rolling elements distance on starvation",
  booktitle="Society of Tribologists & Lubrication Engineers Annual Meeting & Exhibition 2013 / Proceedings of a meeting held 5-9 May 2013, Detroit, Michigan, USA.",
  year="2013",
  month="May",
  pages="296--298",
  publisher="Curran Associates, Inc. ( Dec 2013 )",
  address="Detroit",
  isbn="978-1-62993-289-7"
}