Guys
I am running into difficulty while trying to fit ball bearings. The bearing I have is about 5.5" in diameter.
I want the bearing to stay in its place once mounted on the shaft or bore but I always end up with it sliding away. As I get close to the desired diameter I reduce the cut to bare minimum steps. The shaft is still not accepting the bearing. So I take one more tiny cut using the same depth setting on my cross slide dial with a hope that it will give me the required diameter. Then I find the shaft is too loose for the bearing. I have the same exact experience in boring too. I dont know how else to do it. One moment it appears too tight and next time it is too loose. When am I going wrong? What is the right method to get it right? I do not want to use loctite to get over the loose sliding fit.
Thanks
Prasad
Generally bearings are fitted with either the shaft or the housing an interference fit. The most common approach is if the shaft is rotating then the that will be the interference fit, and generally 0.001 per inch of dia.
The housing should be a firm sliding fit, and the bearing held in place with a circlip or a plate held on by screws. leaving a small end float clearance, at least on one end of the shaft. to allow for thermal expansion, sometimes a spring might be used to keep it loaded in one direction.
In the case where the housing is rotating then the interference fit should be between the outer race and the housing, otherwise it's the same procedure.
When fitting an interference fit bearing onto a shaft, do NOT bash it on, the preferred method is to heat bearing in good machine oil to about 70c or 160f if the bearing has rubber seals consult bearing supplier for max temperature. You may also cool the shaft if possible.
If heating is not possible you can press it on, with a driving sleeve on the inner race only, also use plenty of good machine oil on the shaft to prevent scoring. If you have no alternative but a hammer make up a sleeve to fit over the shaft and drive on the inner race only.
When fitting to a housing the same principals apply except you must only apply pressure to the outer race. Never apply axial pressure to a ball race that will be transferred though the balls.