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Bearing Selection Guide: How to Choose the Right Bearing for Your Design

Bearing Selection Guide: How to Choose the Right Bearing for Your Design English

Introduction

Bearings are one of the most common mechanical elements, yet selecting the wrong type or size is a frequent cause of premature failure. This guide covers the core concepts a mechanical designer needs to select bearings correctly.

Bearing Type Overview

Type Load Direction Typical Use
Deep groove ball bearing Radial + moderate axial Motors, general machinery
Angular contact ball bearing Combined radial + axial Ball screws, spindles
Cylindrical roller bearing Radial (high) Gearboxes, heavy shafts
Tapered roller bearing Radial + axial (heavy) Wheel hubs, bevel gear shafts
Needle roller bearing Radial (space-constrained) Thin-section applications
Thrust bearing (ball/roller) Axial only Vertical shafts, screw jacks

Load Direction: The First Selection Criterion

Before selecting a bearing, determine the load direction:

  • Radial load: perpendicular to the shaft axis (most common)
  • Axial (thrust) load: parallel to the shaft axis
  • Combined load: both radial and axial simultaneously

Deep groove ball bearings handle moderate combined loads. For heavy axial loads, use angular contact or tapered roller bearings. For very heavy radial loads with minimal axial, use cylindrical roller bearings.

Basic Rating Life (L10)

Bearing life is calculated using the L10 life formula — the number of revolutions (or hours) at which 90% of bearings will still be running:

L10 = (C/P)^n × 10^6 revolutions

Where:

  • C = dynamic load rating (from bearing catalog, in kN)
  • P = equivalent dynamic bearing load (calculated from actual radial and axial loads)
  • n = 3 for ball bearings, 10/3 for roller bearings

Target L10 life depends on the application. Industrial machinery typically targets 20,000–50,000 hours; high-speed spindles may target 10,000 hours.

Speed Limits

Bearing catalogs list a reference speed — the maximum speed for standard lubrication conditions. Exceeding this speed requires:

  • Upgraded lubricant (lower viscosity grease or oil mist lubrication)
  • Reduced preload
  • Cooling provisions

Mounting and Fits

Bearing fit to shaft and housing is critical:

  • Rotating inner ring (most common): shaft fit = press fit (k5, m5, or similar); housing = sliding fit (H7)
  • Stationary inner ring: shaft fit = sliding fit (h6); housing = press fit (M7, N7)

Incorrect fits cause either fretting (too loose) or excessive preload leading to early failure (too tight).

Lubrication

Type Speed Range Notes
Grease Low to medium Simple, sealed bearings, infrequent relubrication
Oil bath Medium to high Continuous lubrication; housing must be sealed
Oil circulation High Cooling as well as lubrication; complex system

FAQ

Q. How do I choose between a ball bearing and a roller bearing?
A. Ball bearings are lighter, handle moderate combined loads, and run at higher speeds. Roller bearings carry heavier radial loads and are more tolerant of shaft misalignment (spherical rollers). If load is the dominant factor, use rollers; if speed or compactness is priority, use balls.

Q. What causes premature bearing failure?
A. The most common causes are: incorrect fit (too tight or too loose), contamination (dirt or water in the bearing), insufficient or incorrect lubrication, overload beyond rated capacity, and misalignment.

Q. Where can I find bearing load ratings?
A. Major bearing manufacturers (SKF, NSK, NTN, FAG, Timken) publish comprehensive engineering catalogs — available free online — with detailed load ratings, life calculations, and mounting recommendations for every catalog bearing.


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