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Specs for designing plain or sliding babbit bearings


Specs for designing plain or sliding babbit bearings
Plain or Sliding Bearings, one chapter from Handbook for Machinery Designers, Shop Men and Craftsmen, by Frederick A. Halsey, B.M.E., originally published by McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York, NY. 1916. 8½ x 11 softcover booklet, 22 pages.
Please note this booklet is a new, photo-duplicated copy, NOT an original.
Halsey brings together in one place a vast mass of technical and scientific literature on the most recent breakthroughs in the design and construction of machinery components. This chapter deals with the design and construction of babbitted bearings. Presents all the formulas, and data needed to design and build plain and sliding bearings for any application, from machine tools to new-fangled autos, with 32 excellent schematic drawings and graphs.
1. Permissible Pressures on Bearings for Steam Engines and Other Machines
2. Main Bearing Pressures for Stationary Gas Engines
3. Crank-Pin Bearing Pressures for Stationary Gas Engines
4. Wrist or Piston-Pin Bearing Pressures for Stationary Gas Engines
5. Main Bearing Pressures for Automobile Engines
6. Wrist or Piston-Pin Bearing Pressures for Automobile Engines
7. Crank-Pin Bearing Pressures for Automobile Engines
8. Average Rubbing Speed and Work of Friction for Automobile Engines
9. Miscellaneous Bearing Metals (shows percent of composition, for different applications)
10. A Series of Copper Hardened Alloys
11. Composition of Bearing Metals (Per Cent)
1. Relation between rubbing speed and safe maximum pressure on bearings without artificial cooling for perfect film lubrication.
2. Temperature rise of oil-ring bearings in still air, room temperature 25 deg. Cent. – 77 deg. Fahr.
3. Temperature rise of oil-ring bearings for well ventilated condition but without artificial cooling, room temperature 25 deg. Cent. – 77 deg. Fahr.
4. Relation between rubbing speed and rise in temperature for forced lubrication and three rates of oil feed, room temperature 25 deg. Cent. – 77 deg. Fahr.
5. Journal and bearing with film lubrication.
6. Breaking-down point of perfect oil film.
7. Dimensions of bearings for film lubrication.
8. Final temperatures and specific losses of bearings.
9. Standard bore finishes of Westinghouse babbit bearings.
10. Westinghouse practice for oil grooves in bearings
11. Heavy pedestal bearings with table of dimensions.
12. An improvement on the ring-oiled bearing.
13. Dimension of ball and socket, ring-oiled bearing.
15. Water-cooled bearing with forced lubrication.
16. Standard oil-retaining grooves.
17. End motion of a rotating journal.
18. Revolving element of the Glocker-White turbine governor.
19. Multiple washer thrust bearing.
20. Step bearing of the vertical Curtis stem turbine.
21. The Kingsbury thrust bearing.
22. The Schiele bearing as a worm step.
23. Exact and approximate methods of laying out the Schiele curve.
24. The double cone spindle bearing.
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The history of industrial, transportation, and agricultural development
From Steam Engines . . . to Spacecraft
(Specs for designing plain or sliding babbit bearings was posted and is owned by: Trina Jennings)
Contact: Trinajennings@chicagopartsnetwork.com (Trina Jennings) (actual email hidden)
Contact Trinajennings@chicagopartsnetwork.com (Trina Jennings) for more information.

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