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true peak for slow speed bearings|
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Anybody had any success using true peak to monitor slow speed bearings eg 2- 10Hz running speed? Seems to me like this may be a good way to get an early indication of a defect and may be more trend friendly than ESP?
Gary |
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Very effective tool and possibly the only one. Please search the board for previous discussions on this subject. CSI has a lot of info on that as well.
David |
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I am talking about the true peak dervived from the peak to peak of the time waveform not PeakVue?
Gary |
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Hi Gary,
Yes it can help - the problem tends to be that it is easier to track this parameter if you are doing it as a static trend number rather than from the time signal because we all have the tendency to slow down the acquisition time to obtain a long time sample whereas the peak event is likely to be a very rapid transient event which would therefore not be seen. It depends on your hardware really as to how you can achieve/optimise this. I personally use ultrasound - it is much quicker and easier to manage. Best Regards, Tom Murphy Tom@reliabilityteam.com |
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I have now tried it on my enwatch online system which has the capabilty to collect a true peak trend i.e. a sigle value magnitude reading. I have verified that it is actually true peak and not derived peak by comparing it to a time waveform and standard g's magnitude of the same bandwidth (the enpac 2500 can be loaded with a true peak spec but in actuallity only collects a dervied peaK!).
I was just wondering if anyone else has had much more success diagnosing slow speed bearing problems using TP? regards Gary |
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