Your description of journal bearings not needing much flow or pressure has me scratching my head.hardingfv32 wrote: ↑25 May 2017, 19:59The journal bearings actually do not need much flow or pressure to maintain clearance. Flow is mainly for cooling. The journal inside the bearing does not stay center. On the side where the clearances are reduced the oil is pinched down creating a wedge (pressure) of oil that prevents contact between the two surfaces. This system/design creates its own oil pressure. Note: as long as there is movement/rotation a clearance is maintained… hydrodynamic regime.
The piston and rings are more complex issue. While they are moving they use the hydrodynamic model. The problem is at each end of their travels when they change direction and must by definition come to a stop. They fallout of the hydrodynamic regime and into what is called boundary regime. In the boundary regime you can have actual surface to surface contact and an associated increase in wear. This is where/why you must increase your wear protection.
In an engine a greater percentage of friction is found in the hydrodynamic regime as compared to the boundary regime. The best way to reduce hydrodynamic friction is thinner lubricants. Basically the engine developers are taking this approach and tasking the oil and additive companies to solve the boundary friction issues that this approach creates.
PM your Email and I will provide an article (PDF) on this subject.
Brian
The loading on one of the main bearings in these engines is between 2000 and 5000 psi. That's some serious load.hardingfv32 wrote: ↑25 May 2017, 19:59The journal bearings actually do not need much flow or pressure to maintain clearance. Flow is mainly for cooling. The journal inside the bearing does not stay center. On the side where the clearances are reduced the oil is pinched down creating a wedge (pressure) of oil that prevents contact between the two surfaces. This system/design creates its own oil pressure. Note: as long as there is movement/rotation a clearance is maintained… hydrodynamic regime.
If cooling is provided by other means and leakage is eliminated, the hydrodynamic bearing will operate with no flow (which is considerably less than "not much").MrPotatoHead wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 04:10He said they do not need much flow or pressure. Not just pressure.
Of course the oil flow provides cooling through extraction of heat generated. That's a given. If the oil is not allowed to leak out of the bearings then the oil itself would break down from the heat generated.J.A.W. wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 04:14AFAIR, a significant purpose of the force pumped, positively high pressure/flow ratings required by plain bearings..
..is due to needful heat control, soft-ish bearing journals are certainly not forgiving of excessive heat/forge loads..
When Daimler-Benz substituted their rolling element crankshaft DB 601 with a plain bearing crankshaft for the DB 605..
..they had quite a few unanticipated problems to fix, & make the adapted design work.. to an acceptable standard..
Semantics. Such a race engine bearing does not exist.gruntguru wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 04:19If cooling is provided by other means and leakage is eliminated, the hydrodynamic bearing will operate with no flow (which is considerably less than "not much").MrPotatoHead wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 04:10He said they do not need much flow or pressure. Not just pressure.
As a heat-exchange/cooling medium?MrPotatoHead wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 04:27Of course the oil flow provides cooling through extraction of heat generated. That's a given. If the oil is not allowed to leak out of the bearings then the oil itself would break down from the heat generated.J.A.W. wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 04:14AFAIR, a significant purpose of the force pumped, positively high pressure/flow ratings required by plain bearings..
..is due to needful heat control, soft-ish bearing journals are certainly not forgiving of excessive heat/forge loads..
When Daimler-Benz substituted their rolling element crankshaft DB 601 with a plain bearing crankshaft for the DB 605..
..they had quite a few unanticipated problems to fix, & make the adapted design work.. to an acceptable standard..
Why increase pressure above idle engine speeds at all if the pressure does not serve a purpose?
Correct. The flow is very important though.
I think it is you who is nit-picking.MrPotatoHead wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 04:29Semantics. Such a race engine bearing does not exist.gruntguru wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 04:19If cooling is provided by other means and leakage is eliminated, the hydrodynamic bearing will operate with no flow (which is considerably less than "not much").MrPotatoHead wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 04:10He said they do not need much flow or pressure. Not just pressure.
I probably am just nitpicking. But. Compared to other bearing types I still maintain that engine main and rod journal bearings need a lot of flow relatively speaking.gruntguru wrote: ↑26 May 2017, 07:13I think it is you who is nit-picking.
Brian said "journal bearings actually do not need much flow or pressure to maintain clearance".
That statement is absolutely correct.