Misalignment is a frequent cause of rolling bearing failure. It can cause cage fracture, which will result in seizure of the bearing, pump failure and costly downtime. It can also cause edge loading, which will result in early bearing failure. Typical bearing-life calculation tools assume that the bearing’s inner and outer rings are well aligned. A general acceptable alignment is better than 0.003 radian (10 arcminutes) for ball bearings and 0.0012 radian (4 arcminutes) for cylindrical roller bearings. Rolling bearings are manufactured with great accuracy. Great care must be taken with machining practices and assembly accuracies of the mating shaft and housing to maintain this accuracy. In practice, however, the machining accuracy of parts surrounding the bearing must be considered. Sources of misalignment include:
- Nonconcentric housing bores
- Non-perpendicular shoulders on mating components
- Bent shafting
- Errors during installation
- Baseplate irregularities
- Non-flat mounting surface
- Insufficient rigidity of the mounting surface