PCE Americas PCE-VM 3D Manual page 8

Vibration meter
Table of Contents

Advertisement

times, causing costly production down time. As parts of mechanical equipment
wear and deteriorate, the equipment vibration increases.
Monitoring the vibration of healthy mechanical equipment on an ongoing bas
is, detects any deterioration long before it becomes a critical problem,
allowing spares to be ordered in advance and maintenance to be planned
only when necessary. In this way stocks of expensive and unnecessary
spares can be reduced with obvious financial benefits.
Unscheduled breakdowns result in production losses and the faulty
equipment is usually repaired hastily to get production going as quickly as
possible. Under these stressful conditions staffs are not always able to do
repairs correctly regardless of how conscientious they are, resulting in a high
probability of further early equipment failure.
By implementing a predictive maintenance program with regular
measurements of critical factors like vibration, downtime can not only be
reduced, but planned maintenance is more effective, resulting in improved
product quality and greater productivity.
6.1 Which Parameters Should be Measured?
Acceleration, velocity, and displacement are the three tried and tested
parameters, which give accurate and repeatable results?
Velocity is the most commonly used vibration parameter. It is used for
vibration severity measurements in accordance with ISO 2372, BS 4675 or
VDI 2056, which are guidelines for acceptable vibration levels of machinery
in different power categories. See Appendix.
Acceleration has excellent high frequency measurement capabilities, and is
therefore very effective for determining faults in bearings or gearboxes.
Displacement is typically used on low-speed machines because of its good
low frequency response, and is relatively ineffective when monitoring
bearings.
6.2 Evaluating the Overall Vibration Measurements
Three general principles are commonly used to evaluate your vibration
measurement values:
ISO 2372 (10816) Standard Comparison - Compare values to the limits
established in the ISO 2372 (10816) Standard.
Trend Comparison - Compare current values with values of Baseline for the
same Points over a period of time.
Comparison with Other Machinery - Measure several machines of a similar
type under the same conditions and judge the results by mutual comparison.
If possible, you should use all three comparisons to evaluate your
machinery's condition. ISO 2372 (10816) and trend comparisons should
always be used.
ISO 2372 (10816) Standard Comparison
The ISO 2372 (10816) Standards provide guidance for evaluating vibration
severity in machines operating in the 10 to 200 Hz (600 to 12,000 RPM)
frequency range. Examples of these types of machines are small, direct-
coupled, electric motors and pumps, production motors, medium motors,
generators, steam and gas turbines, turbo-compressors, turbo-pumps and
fans. Some of these machines can be coupled rigidly or flexibly, or connected
through gears. The axis of the rotating shaft may be horizontal, vertical or
inclined at any angle.

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents