When a Screen Bearing Fails, Start With the Symptom
Vibrating screen bearing failure is rarely a simple part-number problem. The same bearing number can fail for different reasons depending on screen acceleration, residual clearance, cage type, grease, dust control, and mounting method.
Before requesting a replacement quote, record what happened first. A bearing that overheated after installation points to a different RFQ discussion than a bearing with cage damage after months of service.
Common Failure Patterns
| Symptom | Likely Cause | What to Check Before RFQ |
|---|---|---|
| Bearing runs hot soon after mounting | Residual clearance too small, over-greasing, or tight fit | Full suffix, bore type, mounting method, residual clearance |
| Cage cracks or fragments | Cage type not suitable for screen vibration, or severe roller skew | Cage suffix, screen acceleration, previous service life |
| Grease turns dark quickly | Contamination, heat, or excessive relubrication interval | Grease type, interval, sealing, dust level |
| Outer ring creep or housing wear | Loose housing fit or vibration looseness | Housing condition, bearing seat photo, fit tolerance |
| Repeated early spalling | Load, contamination, misalignment, or wrong clearance | Screen model, load condition, failed bearing photos |
Clearance and Cage Details Matter
Many screen RFQs include only the bearing number. That is not enough. Vibrating screens often need specific clearance and cage decisions because the bearing is exposed to cyclic acceleration rather than steady rotation.
If the failed unit is marked with suffixes such as C3, C4, F80, CA, MA, MB, K, or W33, include the full marking in the inquiry. The suffix may explain the original design intent and helps avoid quoting a visually similar but unsuitable variant.
For background, review the vibrating screen bearing selection guide and the spherical roller bearing clearance guide.
Installation Clues to Record
For tapered bore screen bearings, the installation process can change the final running clearance. If the bearing was pushed too far onto the adapter sleeve, residual clearance may become too small and temperature can rise quickly.
Record these details if available:
- bearing model and complete suffix
- cylindrical bore or tapered bore
- adapter sleeve or direct shaft mounting
- measured clearance before and after mounting
- grease type and fill amount
- screen speed and approximate operating temperature
- failure photos before the bearing is cleaned
Replacement RFQ Handoff
When you send an RFQ, include the screen model, current bearing number, suffix, cage, clearance, quantity, and the failure symptom. If the plant has a downtime target, mention that too.
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