The present invention, relates to the repair and smoothing of rotating shafts and their shaft sleeves in place in a stave bearing assembly. A stave bearing insert portion of the bearing assembly is removed or substituted with a repair hone insert or series of inserts.
In conventional shaft systems, cylindrical bearing sleeves may be mounted around rotating shafts. A bearing housing surrounds the shaft and bearing sleeve and has several bar shaped, substantially trapezoidal cross-section cavities in which stave bearing inserts are installed. The bearing surfaces of the stave bearing inserts bear upon the rotating shaft sleeve and thereby hold the rotating shaft in a fixed position against sideways movement.
Stave bearing inserts are made of materials that perform best when they are in contact with a smooth cylindrical sleeve. If the bearing sleeve surfaces wear unevenly, the sleeves must be repaired and machined to having a smooth cylinder surface. When the sleeve wall gets too thin it must simply be replaced.
Shaft sleeves can be machined in place to polish and repair their surface if enough clearance is available to fit a portable machining device. The process involves dismantling the entire bearing assembly, installing the portable machining device, and then removing enough material from the sleeve to make a clean and smooth cylindrical surface. New bearing inserts are then machined to fit the new sleeve diameter. Alternatively, the entire shaft can be removed and transported to a machining facility to have the sleeve machined or replaced. This is a major expense and typically involves months of downtime, and major outage losses.
As stave bearing inserts wear out, they often cut circular grooves around the bearing sleeve and scratch the sleeve surface. The unit is then taken out of service awaiting repair for an indefinite period and corrosion and other buildup on the sleeve surface occurs.
If instead scratches, corrosion and other buildup on the shaft sleeves can be smoothed out in place, new stave inserts can be installed which will perform well for years bearing only the high spots between the circular grooves on the sleeve. It is not feasible to clean and polish the sleeves by hand and achieve a satisfactory result.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a hone insert that is adapted for use in a rotating shaft system. The hone insert may be used to smooth the surface of a rotating shaft in place so that the shaft will rotate more efficiently within the bearing housing.
In one example, a hone insert is adapted for use in a rotating shaft system having a segmented stave bearing housing comprised of a plurality of stave bearing inserts to retain the rotating shaft. The hone insert includes a mounting bar section adapted to removably fit into a stave bearing cavity in a segmented stave bearing housing. The mounting bar section has a longitudinal bearing side adapted to face a rotating shaft mounted in the stave bearing housing. The mounting bar section is comprised of a rigid material. A support pad is attached to the longitudinal bearing side of the mounting bar section, wherein the support pad comprises a hone layer on the side of the support pad opposite the mounting bar section and adapted to be adjacent the rotating shaft when mounted in the stave bearing housing. The hone layer comprises an abrasive material on the face thereof adapted to bear against the surface of the rotating shaft. The hone insert may include a support pad that is comprised of a flexible foam material, or alternatively it may comprise a bladder therein along the longitudinal length of the support pad. The bladder may be adapted to be inflated pneumatically with air, or alternatively hydraulically with a liquid. The support pad may be releasably attached to the mounting bar section, or alternatively fixedly attached to the mounting bar section. The hone layer may be attached to the support pad along the side of the support pad adapted to be adjacent the rotating shaft, or alternatively the hone layer may be integral in the side of the support pad adapted to be adjacent the rotating shaft.
The hone insert and the method of using the hone insert as described herein provide for the smoothing of the surface of a rotating shaft, or alternatively the bearing sleeve mounted on the rotating shaft while the shaft is in place. In one particular example of the hone insert that will be described herein, the rotating shaft is a large shaft that may be used in the power generation industry. The hone insert allows that shaft, or its sleeve, to be smoothed in place rather than going to the significant and expensive alternative of removing the shaft for repair and smoothing. Of course the hone insert may have uses with other rotating shafts for smoothing or otherwise repairing the surface of that rotating shaft in place.
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The mounting bar section 26 of the hone insert 20 is shown as being a separate component than the support pad 29 which is shown as being a separate component from the honing layer 27. It is possible that the mounting bar section and support pad may be a single material. It is possible that the mounting bar section, support pad and honing layer may be a single and consistent material. It is believed that the mounting bar section being made of a rigid material allows for more efficient installation of the hone insert during the smoothing process.
The support pad 29 may be formed of a flexible foam material including, for instance, a durable polyurethane foam. Alternatively, the support pad 29 may be formed of a hollow bladder. The bladder may be expanded pneumatically by adding air or hydraulically by adding a liquid in the bladder. The bladder is configured along the longitudinal length of the support pad. By varying the inflation of the support pad, it is possible to adjust the pressure which the abrasive surface may be pressed against the bearing or bearing sleeve surface. The bladder example of the support pad may be made from a rubber material or any other flexible material that allows for expansion of that support pad. As noted earlier, both the mounting bar section and the support pad may together include a bladder therein that would allow the hone insert to be inflated or hydraulically filled once it was inserted into a stave bearing cavity.
In the example of a support pad defining a bladder therein, it is thereby possible to adjust the pressure of the abrasive material against the shaft. This pressure may range from 0.1 to 100 lbs./in.2 or alternatively 1 to 50 lbs./in.2 or still further alternatively 2 to 15 lbs./in.2.
The linear length which the abrasive honing layer is contacting the surface of the sleeve or shaft may be varied depending on the shape of the support pad that bears the abrasive surface onto the sleeve or shaft surface. In one example, the abrasive layer may press against the shaft on a linear length of the circumference of the shaft of 0.1 to 4 inches, or alternatively, 0.5 to 2 inches, or still further alternatively about 1 to 1.5 inches.
The specific abrasive material that may be used on the hone layer of the hone insert includes any material that may be used to smooth the surface of the shaft or shaft sleeve. Generally speaking, the abrasive material may include hard materials such as aluminum oxide, diamond, garnet, carbide or other known materials. Alternatively, the abrasive material may be polymer based including, for example, using a Scotchbrite polymer. Still further alternatively, a metal fiber or particle material including steel wool or steel fibers may be used. Still further alternatively, a foam material impregnated with hard materials such as the particles described earlier herein may be used.
The abrasive material may be attached to the surface of the support pad by glue or rubber cement or other material that may be alternatively impregnated into the support pad.
The abrasive surface may have course or medium or fine levels of smoothing. It is envisioned that multiple hone inserts may be used including a course insert, a medium insert, and a fine insert used to smooth a surface. In one example, a course insert may have an abrasive in the amount of 40 to 100 grit, or alternatively about 60 to 90, or further alternatively about 70 to 80. A medium hone may include grit in the range of 80 to 220, or alternatively 100 to 200, or still further alternatively 120 to 180. A fine abrasive insert may include grit in the range of 200 to 2,000, or alternatively 200 to 600, or further alternatively 200 to 400. It is apparent that additional hone inserts may be employed. Different amounts of grit can be used with the different inserts.
Once a hone insert is installed in the stave bearing housing and around the shaft, the amount of time that the shaft is rotated and, accordingly, smoothed by the honing surface, will depend on the time and the speed of rotating of the shaft in combination with the aggressiveness of the abrasive surface and the condition of the surface being smoothed. In some examples, the shaft may be rotated while bearing against the hone insert for one minute to 24 hours, or alternatively ten minutes to eight hours, or still further alternatively about one to six hours.
In one example, a segment of a stave bearing housing is removed from the housing to expose the staves. One of the existing stave bearing inserts is removed from the trapezoidal cavity in the bearing housing. Then, a honing insert is placed into the vacant bearing segment cavity. That hone insert is then shimmed or otherwise made tight within the stave bearing cavity. The segment of the stave bearing housing is then replaced in the housing so that the abrasive surface of the hone insert is adjacent and bears down against the sleeve surface. The shaft is then rotated until smooth depending on the adhesive. These steps may then be repeated multiple times to improve the smoothness of the surface.
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Other embodiments of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification. It is intended that the specification and Figures be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.