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Mighty Way Industrial Limited

Retainer

Retainer / Cage


(A) Pressed Steel Cage

Selection & Applications:

·  General industrial bearings (deep groove ball bearings, cylindrical roller bearings) – low cost, high volume.

·  Moderate temperature range (-40°C to +150°C), insensitive to most lubricants.

·  Suitable for low to medium speed, moderate loads – not for very high speeds because pressed construction has poor balance.

 

Precautions:

·  Surface zinc or phosphate plated – limited rust resistance.

·  Relatively large clearance between rolling elements and pockets – can cause noise and friction.

·  At high speed, centrifugal force may cause deformation or fracture.

·  Load: centrifugal and inertial forces can be calculated using bearing dynamics, but stiffness scatter of pressed parts makes results uncertain.

·  Speed: limiting speed from bearing catalogues can be used, but individual cage fatigue life cannot be accurately calculated.

·  Life: no standard cage life model – usually assumed same as calculated bearing life (in reality often shorter).

 

Experience counts:

·  In high‑speed applications, if measured temperature rise exceeds 70°C, switch to a machined cage.

·  Temperature: material property vs. temperature curves are openly available.

·  Hand‑rotating noise: “clicking” sounds indicate pocket wear – shorten relubrication intervals.

·  Inspection: red wear debris on cage surface indicates insufficient lubrication or deformation.

 

(B) Nylon PA66‑GF25, glass‑fibre reinforced

Selection & Applications:

·  Small‑to‑medium bearings, home appliances, automotive parts (low noise, low cost).

·  Allows slight contact between rolling elements and cage without generating metallic wear particles.

·  Some elasticity, not highly sensitive to contamination.

 

Precautions:

·  Strict temperature limit: -30°C to +110°C (short‑term 120°C).

·  Hygroscopic – dimensional changes (0.2-0.5% size increase per 1% moisture uptake) may cause interference.

·  Not for vacuum (outgassing) or strong acids/alkalis.

·  No widely accepted fatigue life model; moisture absorption and ageing make calculations unreliable.

·  Centrifugal deformation can be estimated, but creep cannot be quantified.

·  Speed/temperature can only be assessed using material limits - precise life prediction not possible.

·  Life: the cage is often the “weakest link” – schedule first inspection at 30-50% of calculated bearing life.

·  Field judgement: if cage crumbles or melting smell appears, stop immediately.

·  Empirical life: under rated conditions, usually no more than 15,000 hours - mandatory replacement.

 

Experience counts:

·  Pre‑soak cage in target humidity and temperature for 24 hours, measure pocket dimensional change.

·  Cage material must be compatible with the lubricant. 

 

(C) Phenolic Resin - Laminated, e.g., “Micarta”

Selection & Applications:

·  Very high speed bearings (precision machine tool spindles, angular contact ball bearings).

·  Low density, low centrifugal forces, flexible.

·  Typical grades: M208, M209 (FAG), BX (SKF).

 

Precautions:

·  Not water‑resistant, not high‑temperature resistant (long‑term <110°C).

·  Brittle - can fracture under shock loads.

·  Lubricant must be compatible with phenolic resin (avoid certain synthetic oils containing esters).

·  Manufacturers provide speed limit curves (dn value charts) - they can be used for calculation.

·  No standard life model - typically estimate as half the designed bearing life.

 

Experience counts:

·  Run‑in: 4 hours at 20% rated speed, check for powder release.

·  Sudden vibration increase (acceleration >10 g) indicates unstable cage wear.

·  Correction: multiply calculated speed by 0.9 (oil lubrication) or 0.8 (grease lubrication).

 

(D) PEEK (Polyetheretherketone, often carbon/glass‑fibre reinforced)

Selection & Applications:

·  Severe environments: high temperature (~250°C), aggressive chemicals, oil‑free lubrication.

·  Medical equipment, semiconductor manufacturing, aerospace bearings.

·  Low friction, low noise, radiation resistant.

 

Precautions:

·  Very high cost (10-20× that of nylon).

·  Strength drops significantly at high temperature – fibre reinforcement needed.

·  Lower modulus than metal – may cause excessive elastic deformation.

 

Experience counts:

·  Trial run at 120% rated speed for 30 minutes in a simulated environment, check for deformation.

·  Empirical rule: long‑term operating temperature should be <80% of glass transition temperature (~143°C).

·  Whitening of cage surface indicates lubricant incompatibility – switch to PFPE oil.

·  Cage life can be estimated using fracture mechanics models (crack propagation).

·  Speed limit can be calculated from density and strength values, using FEA + multi-body dynamics.

 

(E) Machined Brass Cage

Selection & Applications

·  High speed, moderate‑to‑heavy loads (spindles, high‑speed gearboxes, turbochargers).

·  Naturally low friction against rolling elements.

·  Good thermal conductivity, helps remove frictional heat.

 

Precautions:

·  High cost (cast or machined from solid).

·  Susceptible to corrosion from certain lubricant additives (active sulphur).

·  High density (≈8.5 g/cm³) – at very high speeds, centrifugal forces are significant.

 

Experience counts:

·  Speed limit can be determined from oil film forces between pockets and rolling elements.

·  Temperature effects on strength are openly available.

·  Dark spots on brass surface after operation indicate lubricant corrosion – change oil type.

·  Short‑term temperature allowed up to 180°C, but above 150°C check hardness every 500 hours.

·  Correction factor: multiply calculated limiting speed by 0.85 as practical safety margin.

 

(F) Machined Steel Cage

Selection & Applications:

·  Very large bearings (wind turbine main shafts, rolling mills, slewing rings).

·  High reliability, impact resistance, wide temperature range (-40°C to +200°C).

·  Typically riveted or one‑piece construction.

 

Precautions:

·  Heavy - high centrifugal forces, not suitable for high speed.

·  Requires anti‑rust treatment (silver, zinc plating, or phosphating).

·  High machining precision required to avoid rolling element jamming.

·  Inspection: use borescope to check pocket edges - plastic deformation means increase hardness or enlarge fillet.

·  Maintenance: check rivets for looseness every 2000 hours.

 

Experience counts:

·  Correction: actual permissible speed = calculated limiting speed × thermal balance factor (typically 0.8–0.9).

·  Fatigue life checked at 10⁷ cycles based on material strength.

 

(G) Aluminium Alloy Cage

Selection & Applications:

·  Aero‑engine main shafts, high‑speed compressors.

·  Lightweight (≈2.7 g/cm³), high specific strength.

·  Usually hard anodised to improve wear resistance.

 

Precautions:

·  Sensitive to fretting wear (once anodised layer is damaged, base metal wears rapidly).

·  Higher thermal expansion than steel - guide clearance requires special design at high temperature.

·  Not for alkaline lubricants or seawater environments.

·  Inspection: anodised layer must not peel - if peeling occurs, replace immediately.

 

Experience counts:

·  Empirical assembly clearance: at room temperature, guide clearance 0.02-0.04 mm larger than for steel cages.

·  If vibration spectrum shows half‑frequency whirl, reduce speed by 10% or increase oil flow.

·  Finite element analysis well established – thermal and centrifugal stresses can be accurately calculated.

·  Rotordynamic models can predict cage whirl stability.