Sideways and I are now considering all aspects of the design we have come up with. One area that needs consideration is the capacity of the two wheel bearings. We needed to verify that the proposed worst case loads created by a M42 20mm blade can actually be accommodated by the bearings that are used. This is one reason we always use high quality bearings such as SKF, *** etc and never in rotating load bearing applications cheap generic bearings.
The Bandsaw is designed to use two 6202 bearings in each wheel mounted on an axle. This will set the limit on what loads we can reach by the springs tensioning the blade without damaging the bearings.
Bearings have many design factors specified in their data sheets, two of which are important for our application. The static and dynamic load capacity of the bearings.
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The dynamic capacity is when the bearing is turning, and is virtually always a much higher value than that for the static or not turning. The reason is that when turning, the loads that the race see are lower when rotating due to there being a rotating element, this reduces the effective racial load on the race: the faster a bearing turns the higher load it can withstand.
The bearing can handle just over 8KN of dynamic load but only 3.75KN of static load. This is one of the major reasons that you should release the tension on the blade when the bandsaw is not being used.