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Pump
Alignment Technique:
Courtesy:
IDCON -
Maintenance management consultants
Did you
know that a perfect .000 alignment can sometimes be the wrong
thing to do? Rarely, if ever, do two machines in a machine train
generate the same temperatures during operation. These factors
can cause perfectly aligned shafts to be misaligned out of
tolerance while operating. Lets take use the following motor
driven pump as an example of this fact.
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To calculate the amount of expected thermal
growth, use the following formula:
Thermal Growth = (T Running - T
Non-Running) x h x k
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T = Casing Temperature in the Plane Of The
Feet
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h = Height from Base plate to Shaft
Centerline
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k = Coefficient of Expansion
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In this example the motor will experience a rise in the front
foot of ~2mils and 1.8mils in the rear foot. The pump will
experience a greater amount of growth due to the fact that the
fluid cavity will heat up a greater rate. This calculates out to
~6mils in the back and ~5.5mils in the front.
Assuming that the shaft
centerlines were a perfect .000 prior to operation, they would
be about .002 out during operation. These is right at the edge
of acceptable on most machines, and remember, if we were just
within the tolerance before operation, we would now be almost
.004 out of alignment.
To correct this from
happening, we must intentionally lower each machine to the
amount of thermal growth expected once zero is achieved.
Depending on the method of alignment used these dial indicator
readings can be determined without going through the step of
aligning to zero and then removing the applicable shims.
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