Roller
Roller
Roller
KILN ROLLER
ADJUSTMENT
& SKEW
Skew, more than any other mechanical adjustment, is the least understood, the most
misused, and is often the most troublesome mechanical issue with a kiln.
DEFINITION: Skew is the position of the roller axis with respect to turning axis of the
shell. If they are parallel then the roller is said to have zero skew or be neutral. Zero
skew means no axial thrust is created. If the roller is not parallel then it is said to be
skewed or cut and does create an axial thrust that pushes the kiln either uphill or
downhill. Because kiln shells are not truly straight its rotating axis at the rollers is not
constant. Zero skew cannot be set with rollers that have a fixed base. This is only
possible if the roller support base is allowed to articulate to follow the shell/tire wobble.
Skew is created with a very small (0.004 to 0.040 inches, 0.1 to 1.0 mm) pivoting
adjustment and only changes the parallel relationship of the roller to the longitudinal axis
of the rotating shell. It does not affect (to any significant degree) the position of the shell
either in plan or elevation views. In other words the roller is pivoted but the shell is not
significantly raised or moved laterally.
This simple, but important concept must be understood completely before correct roller
adjustments can be made. Thrust control by skewing may be the single most important
adjustment which influences the optimum mechanical operation of the unit.
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29 August 2003
Badly skewed rollers, effective skew resulting from badly worn bearings or running
surfaces of tires or rollers, often cause more mechanical damage to kilns than all other
problems combined.
Understanding the action and reaction of skewing a roller and understanding how roller
and bearing wear can create apparent skew is essential to avoid potential catastrophic
failure as illustrated here.
The magnitude of axial thrust that can be generated by roller support skew cannot and
must not be underestimated. It usually starts with a hot bearing. Left unattended
bearing housings can easily be pushed off their support bases.
Evaluating the direction and magnitude of skew for each roller also requires an
understanding of mechanics of the bearing housings. There are some basic mechanical
differences, which once understood will apply to all the various housings that exist.
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WHAT IS SKEW?
WHY SKEW ROLLERS?
WHY IS PROPER THRUST IMPORTANT?
What is Skew?
Skew is a description of the position of the roller axis with respect to the rotating drum
axis. If these axis are parallel the roller is neutral or has zero skew. If they are not
parallel then the roller is said to be cut or skewed either correctly by pushing the drum
uphill or incorrectly when pushing the drum downhill. The amount of skew is typically
0.005 to 0.040 inches (0.1 to 1 mm) for rollers in good condition of any size.
Why Skew?
Since the drum is set on a slope, gravity pulls it downhill. Therefore something must
control the axial drum position. Typically this is the job of the thrust rollers. But the
skew of the carrying rollers can also counteract this gravitational pull. Often rotating
equipment is economically built with light thrust rollers that need help from the carrying
rollers skew to keep the drum from pushing downhill too hard.
Why is Proper Thrust Important?
Any amount of skew acts to deteriorate and tear up the rolling surface. If the operation
of the unit requires some carrying roller skewing to limit the load on the thrust rollers
then the skewing must be set to the minimum in order to save wear and tear as much as
possible. Skewing is really a compromise whereby some of the long term running life is
sacrificed to save the capital cost of more expensive thrust rollers.
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A full thrust kiln is simply one fitted with static thrust rollers that are large enough to
fully support the kiln with the carrying rollers neutral. Sometimes with larger and longer
kilns there are thrust roller assemblies on two or even more piers. There are kilns that
have been built with as many as twelve (12) sets of support rollers.
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Which Way?
Which Way?
Understanding which way to position/reposition a roller and understanding the
subsequent action and reaction of an adjustment is essential in gaining control of the
mechanical operation.
Stand on the down- turning side of the drum.
Simply steer the roller in the direction the tire should be moved.
If the roller is steered to move the tire to the right the reaction is for the roller to move
left.
If the roller is steered to move the tire left the reaction is that roller moves right.
Its a case of simple action reaction. Newton once postulated For every action there
is an equal and opposite reaction. Pushing the tire one way causes the reaction of the
roller to drive itself the other way.
The same holds true for the roller on the opposite side. Essentially the rollers should be
always be kept parallel.
There is no logical sense or purpose to have the rollers toed in. Toed in rollers create
unnecessary wear for no benefit whatsoever.
The animation provided on the CD which accompanies this book shows how the tire can
be directed either right or left.
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DE
1) Insignificant
Change in
Elevation
Angle
R
r
skew
E = A 2 - (B- skew)2 A 2 B2
A = Radius of tire + radius of roller
B = sin(Angle) A
For a typical kiln:
Angle = 30 degrees
R - radius of tire may be 2000mm (79 or 6.5 feet)
r - radius of roller may be 500mm (20)
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Neutral
a
2) Skewing disturbs
load distribution
Excessive skew
2) The line of contact between the roller and the tire changes. The line of contact is not really a line. It
is an area defined by
i) the length of contact between the roller and the tire in the axial direction.
ii) the width of contact which varies according to:
a)roller diameter
b)tire diameter
c)hardness of the material
d)roller slope matching the tire slope
e)amount of skew
It is most desirable to have the area of contact as rectangular as possible. e.g... view (a). When skewing
is required, which is the case for many units by design, then clearly the minimum amount of skew to just
balance the down thrust of the shell, should be sought. The skewing should be shared equally by all
the rollers. For illustration purposes diagram (b) shows excessive skewing, so much so that only half the
roller face is in contact. Since the load this roller carries has not changed, the stresses in this reduced
area must necessarily be higher. Visually the stress volume of the yellow shape at a must equal that
of b.
We can see therefore that excessive skewing decreases the contact area and increases the unit load,
and stress, in that area. The contact area behaves similarly to a car tire in contact with the road. The
contact area actually flattens out and the material in the flat area deforms. When this deformation
exceeds the elastic limits of the material, it fails.
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SHIM UP
Tire Side
Surface
Pressure
Distribution
c
skew
skew
Skewing causes edge loading as seen in b. This can be catastrophic if the skewing is
excessive. The symptoms would include mushrooming, edge cracks in the rim and
ultimately large pieces coming out of the loaded edge of the roller. Since some skewing
is required in most cases, changing the roller slope by shimming is beneficial. Only
bearing housings that have self aligning bearing sleeves or spherical roller bearings are
easily adjusted in this way. Bearing housings with fixed sleeve bearings can be
shimmed using tapered shims but this is a more complex procedure. Shimming as a
compensation for skew is often restricted to larger units. When it is required it will be
stated in the kiln manufacturers documentation.
When the roller slope is adjusted for skew the load carried by the roller is distributed as
shown in c. The peak stress is moved back to the center of the roller, the stress
reduces towards the edges and is symmetrically distributed. This is a much better
distribution pattern and makes the effort to do this worth while.
On the upturning side of the kiln shell the downhill bearing is shimmed and on the
downturning side the uphill bearing is shimmed. The shim thickness is about 0.6 times
the amount of skew.
With the highest load centered on the roller we see why convex/concave wear is a
natural result.
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29 August 2003
Skewed rollers
Accelerate wear by:
Uneven load distribution
Loss of contact, high stress
Slipping / skidding
- - - use graphite
3) Slipping / skidding
As long as the the tire and rollers are free to shift they do so until the roller shaft reaches and
seats on a thrust bearing. Similarly the tire will shift until it bumps up against a thrust roller.
When neither the ring or the roller can shift, the thrust load is relieved by slippage. Therefore,
with skewed rollers we no longer have pure rolling action. Slippage is another effect that causes
problems. It tears the rolling surfaces. An overly skewed support roller can generate more thrust
than the thrust bearing can handle. The oil film in the bearings becomes too thin, metal to metal
contact occurs, the surfaces heat up which reduces the oil viscosity further, and the bearing fails.
Once the thrust bearing fails the heat generated is usually enough to fail the support bearing as
well. When support rollers are fitted with spherical roller bearings the situation is more critical
since the thrust load and the support load both act on the one bearing simultaneously. These
will tend to fail more frequently than journal bearings with thrust rings or thrust buttons.
Since a skewed roller no longer runs against the tire with a pure rolling action, but induces some
slippage, lubrication of the outside diameter with dry graphite is highly desirable, and helps
preserve the surfaces. Oil lubrication on the rolling surface should be avoided as it can promote
spalling.
Once again we have good cause to avoid skewing when possible and to limit it to a minimum
when it is required.
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Kiln
Tire
Rotation
Upward
Tire
Rotation
Downward
Kiln
Roller
Roller
Bearing
Support
Roller
a.
Bearing
Support
Roller
b.
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THRUST
BEARING
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DOWNHILL
UPHILL
ROLLER
THRUST
BUTTON
THRUST
BUTTON
GAP
- (6-12 mm)
KEY
KEY
NO
GAP
AXIAL FLOAT
ROLLER SWAPPING ENDS
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29 August 2003
SLEEVE BEARING
SELF-ALIGNING
THRUST COLLAR
GAP
THRUST BEARING
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DOWNHILL
UPHILL
Thrust ring
Roller
Thrust ring
No Gap
Gap
- (6-12 mm)
Thrust bearing
Axial Float
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INSPECTION PORT
Determining thrust on Type II style housings is a matter of removing the inspection ports
and examining the position of the roller. When the ports are removed you will see where
one thrust washer is tight by noticing that oil has been wiped clean from its surface. This
can only be seen on the roller on the down turning side of the shell. The other should
show a gap in which the oil runs freely over the thrust washer. This type of roller is
considered a puller. This means that the shaft will move until it seats against the thrust
collar.
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OPEN
TIGHT
OPEN
Notice the gap between the thrust collar and washer.
TIGHT
Notice how the thrust washer and collar are tight.
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UPHILL
DOWNHILL
DIAL INDICATOR
SPHERICAL ROLLER
BEARINGS
BEARING W/FIXING
RING
Type III.) Spherical Roller Bearings (No separate thrust bearings) contd
By fixing a dial indicator as shown, thrust load may be detected if the unit can be
reversed. Often there is roll-back when a unit is stopped. Any thrust load will tend to tip
the bearing housing slightly. Upon roll-back the thrust reverses direction. There will be a
small amount of axial movement on the bearing housing. The greater the thrust load, the
greater the amount of movement. Usually the fixing ring is mounted on the down-hill side
bearing. This then should be the housing to which the dial indicator is mounted. If it is
mounted on the other bearing, the free bearing, then the outer race may move within
the housing and the movement may not be detected by the indicator. If reversal is not an
option, then slapping a broom handle wrapped with a greased terry cloth across the face
of the roller will also do the trick. As the strip of grease goes through the pinch point, the
thrust is relieved and the bearing housing jumps. This technique is obviously limited to a
one time use.
Loosening the hold down bolts may be another possibility to release some axial
movement on the housing. Safety is always a consideration to be heeded.
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PREPARING EQUIPMENT
FOR TRUNNION ADJUSTMENTS
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GRAPHITE
FANS
WATER/WET BURLAP
If there is a history of hot bearings or if problems are anticipated for whatever reasons
be prepared to deal with the situation of hot bearings. For units with sleeve bearings If a
problem arises as a result of roller adjustments hot bearings are usually the first in the
list. Be prepared.
The problem is either excessive thrust where the thrust bearing heats up or more usual
there are grooves in the bearing shaft and brass sleeve which prevent smooth axial float.
If there is excessive thrust graphite powder can be applied liberally to the roller face.
This will relieve all thrust and may allow the trunnion to cool. The graphite must be
continuously applied until counteracted moves can be made, and the trunnion can be put
into a position where it will run cool.
If thrust is not the issue then using a combination of fans and compressed air, cooler air
can be directed at the bearing housing, roller, and trunnion shaft. Caution needs to be
used so that dirt and other foreign material does not enter the inside of the housing. Do
not blow air into the housing through the inspection port. This may cause an explosion.
It is not recommended that water be run directly on the trunnion face. Wet burlap on the
housings will help cooling. Make sure water is flowing freely through the cooling jackets.
Liberal application of water externally is good as long as it does not get into the housing
at seals or inspection ports.
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HEAT EXCHANGER
SYNTHETIC OIL
Usually the best method of cooling is to use a water to oil heat exchanger or oil cooler.
These are readily available commercial units. The suction side of the pump is
connected to the oil drain on the trunnion. The oil is then dispensed onto the top of the
trunnion shaft through the inspection port. It is also recommended to add an oil filter.
Caution must be used to keep the filter as free-flowing as possible.
If a bearing is known to be a problem synthetic oil should be used before any moves are
attempted. Synthetic oil retains its viscosity to 450F [230 C]. If a petroleum oil is being
used be prepared for the possibility of having to change oil on the fly to a synthetic to
sustain a high rise in temperature. Some synthetic oils are not compatible with
petroleum oils. The changeover must be total without cross contamination. Continue
flushing with synthetic until the change is complete.
If none of these methods bring the temperature under control, bearing failure is
imminent. Prepare to slow and stop the kiln. A slowed kiln may allow the problem
bearing to seat-in. However an overheated bearing is damaged and cannot repair
itself by continued operation. Even if the temperature is brought under control the
situation can redevelop at any time. The sleeves and roller need to be change at first
opportunity.
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Moves can be properly measured using dial indicators, one for each bearing assembly.
Often the magnetic bases for the dial indicators are inadequate to hold the indicator
reliably over the course of an adjustment campaign. Weld brackets to the base and use
clamps to hold the indicators for 100% reliability.
Adjustments using the flats of the adjustment screw is good enough for ball park
adjustment but must never be relied on for recording the actual moves made. The
bearing housing may take some time to seat in. Leave indicators in place for as long as
24 hours after the last adjustment, before recording the final bearing position.
From our previous inspection we have catalogued roller positions, surface conditions,
thrust direction and what problem bearings (if any) exist. From this we can derive the
most offending roller to the least, and sequence our adjustment campaign accordingly.
Suppose we were required to do more than set the rollers to their correct and minimum
thrust. Suppose it was required to move them for alignment and skew as well. Say our
first roller needs a 15 mm (0.6)) move towards the center line of the unit in order to
correct for alignment. This would then be an alignment adjustment. We will use the roller
reaction to guide our work.
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Documentation
KILN:___________________PIER # _________INSPECTOR:___________________
IS
DATE:________________________TIME:_________________________________
Important
_____________
Bearing temp
Bearing temp
___________
____________
Bearing temp
___________
Bearing temp
_____________
Roller temp.
_____________
Discharge/Feed
Stop Blocks
UP
DOWN
NONE
Documentation is important.
Only one person should be given authority to have moves made. He should provide
written instructions as to which bearing should be moved and in what direction.
Personnel making the moves should record, date and sign a record of their work.
Inspection sheet as shown here for example is an efficient way to do this. These sheets
should then be kept in a log book. A running history of roller adjustments is necessary to
maintain control of the mechanical condition of the kiln.
If multiple moves on one roller are anticipated this sheet needs to be accompanied by a
table on which moves, times and temperatures can be listed.
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With all types of sleeved bearings, the crosscross-over action reaction when adjusting
rollers in and out is used to tune roller positions.
Spherical roller bearings lack this advantage.
The Cross-Over
Once it is seen that the roller shifts easily without a temperature rise, then the size of the
moves can be increased to say 2mm (0.80) per bearing. The sequence of the moves
should alternate from one bearing to the other with the shaft sliding across with each
move. Waiting 20 minutes between moves is also unnecessary as long as the shaft
shifts easily with each move. The work can continue smartly providing there are no other
mitigating circumstances like a bowed shell, or a rise of oil temperature anywhere etc.
This continues until the average of the moves for both bearings reaches the desired
total, 15 mm for this example. The final moves should be very small ones to leave the
minimum amount of skew on the roller.
Even the largest rollers, and there are some as large as 10 feet (3050 mm) in diameter,
will respond quickly to a 0.10mm (0.004) skew adjustment.
Naturally all the work must be monitored with dial indicators and must be done with the
unit in operation.
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Roller Adjustments
26mm [1.01]
19mm [0.75]
12mm [0.49]
Gear
This procedure is used with units that have sleeved bearings. See Two-Pier Alignment
for the procedure using spherical roller bearings and pillow blocks. The principle of roller
reaction is always valid even though thrust direction is not seen by axial roller shift.
Secondary techniques need to be used.
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Direction of
Thrust as a
Result of
Roller Skew
Direction of
Thrust as a
Result of
Roller Skew
Kiln Rotation
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Plan View
Carrying Rollers
Parallelism
Rotation
Discharge
Pier
Feed
Pier
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0.1mm
(0.003)
Support Rollers
Skewed To Thrust
Kiln Uphill
0.1mm
(0.003)
Rotation
Feed
Uphill
Discharge
Downhill
Shell Thrust
0.1mm
(0.003)
0.1mm
(0.003)
Ideal Placement.
Unfortunately many designs require that support rollers be skewed. The thrust
mechanisms of these designs are inadequate to support the entire downward thrust of
the shell. This is especially true of large long rotary kilns. Since most of this type of
rotary trunnion-supported equipment is installed on a slope, there is a natural component
of force acting in the axial direction of the shell. If this force cannot be completely
managed by the thrust mechanism(s) it is the skewing of the support rollers that must
help out.
Skewing is a compromise. Skewing accelerates the wear and tear of the support
mechanisms but then allows smaller, less costly thrust mechanisms to operate
successfully. If skewing is insufficient the thrust mechanisms will fail prematurely. If
skewing is excessive additional wear and tear of the support components takes place
and the thrust mechanism can still fail. If rollers are skewed against each other, wear
and tear takes place but the advantage supposedly gained by skewing is lost.
The maximum performance life of rotary equipment that requires skewing, can only be
achieved by skewing correctly and keeping it to a minimum.
The amount of skew shown in the illustration may be sufficient for most installations
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Distributing the load across the trunnion face equally among all of the rollers
that tire and trunnion wear is reduced.
Possible reduction in the units main motor load. This will reduce
electricity consumption and save money.
so
For a fixed amount of skew the resultant thrust force varies with:
Load. The heavier the shell, the harder it bears down on the rollers the more friction
force develops. Lightly loaded the shell tends to sit downhill. The heavier its loaded
the more it tends to run up hill.
Speed. The amount of thrust developed is directly proportional to speed. A slow
running shell will tend to stay downhill. The more it is sped up the more it will tend to
climb uphill.
Surface lubrication, temperature and ambient conditions, anything that will influence
the grip or slipperiness of the rolling surfaces will effect the thrust developed.
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