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A major paper mill had experienced five unscheduled bearing failures on two wet ends in a two year
time-frame. These failures were very costly and forced a review of the mill's lubrication
practices and lubrication selection. The decision was made to test the impact of upgrading
lubricants.
Bearing temperatures and vibration readings were monitored on the two paper machines before and
after switching to high-performance synthetic grease. Equipment temperatures were taken four weeks
after lubrication with the original synthetic grease and then four weeks after lubrication with
the high-performance synthetic grease. Changing to the high-performance synthetic grease dropped
temperatures an average of 30° F (Figures 1 and 2). The lower temperatures have been stable for 19
months.
Figure 1. Temperature readings on a paper machine press section with original syntheic
grease with machine speed at 2,700 fpm. |
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Figure 2. Temperature readings on the same paper machine press section shown in Figure 1
with upgraded high-performance synthetic grease with machine speed at 2,900 fpm. |
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For a larger view of these figures, click here.
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Vibration levels prior to the lubricant upgrade were normal but since the change, many vibration
frequencies have dropped. No bearing vibration reading on either machine increased.
Most importantly, neither paper machine experienced a single unscheduled or scheduled bearing
replacement since upgrading lubricants during the first two years of service. The annual
production loss in dollars from bearing failures during two years of using the original grease
was $64,625 (5 failures x 5.5 hours per failure x $4,700 per hour lost time / 2 years).
In addition to eliminating the downtime expense due to the failed bearings, upgrading lubricants
enabled the mill to reduce maintenance expenses by reducing the frequency of lubrication
intervals. The plant was originally using forty 120-lb kegs of synthetic grease annually for two
machines at a cost of $500 / keg. The annual cost was $20,000.
The high-performance synthetic grease allowed the mill to extend lubrication intervals from four
weeks to twelve weeks. Although the high-performance synthetic grease had a higher purchase price
at $632 / keg, only sixteen 120-lb kegs were needed annually, for a total cost of $10,112. The
combined annual financial impact of reduced maintenance cost and lubrications purchases was
significant.
Annual savings by eliminating bearing failures: $64,625
Annual savings by reducing the amount of lubricant purchased: $9,888
Total annual savings: $74, 513.
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