On Mon, 02 Aug 2010 09:40:13 -0500, Ignoramus18921
wrote:
So, a recap is that the the outside temp of the spindle after 15
minutes running at 3K RPM, was 115F. (30 something degree F temp
rise).
I have looked far and wide for the answer as to whetehr this is excessive.
According to someone at cnczone, he measured temp on the bearing and
outside with a non-contact thermometer, and the bearing was 10 degrees
hotter than the outside of the spindle.
So it was, say, 130F, being a little generous, or 54 degrees C.
Barden machine tool bearing catalog says that their spindle bearings
can run at 100C. http://www.bardenbearings.com/PDF%20CD/MACHINET.PDF
My bearings are not Barden, but it is a good data point.
Another guy pointed out that Timken's roller bearing calculations
assume a temp of 130 C for the service life calculations.
So, everything points to a conclusion that 115C on the outside
represents a normal bearing operating temperature and is nothing to
worry about. Since I use this mill for hobby purposes, I will back out
a litle bit and will run it at 2700 or so RPM max.
i
Or run it at full bore for the several minutes it takes to make the
cuts.
Gunner
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a godless liberal wants no one to pray. A conservative who doesn't
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Bobby XD9