MrPotatoHead wrote: ↑08 Jun 2017, 02:04
Singabule wrote: ↑08 Jun 2017, 01:53
Multi dimensional stress on shaft and case means creeping on metal because of heat and forces? It is metallurgy issue or vibration issue? There is no shock asorber between H and Block? So H must be integrated within it, not bolted. What a risky design!
The H could still be a separate housing and be bolted solid to the block.
Almost everything on an F1 is bolted solid.
Hello Potato Head,
I'm not in the auto industry, but oil refining where very high temperatures and pressures factor into machine design. What's usually the case for these severe conditions is that the geometry must be such that during thermal expansion the casings must expand from a fixed point to avoid creating additional stresses on bearings. Machines not design for these conditions tend to have geometry that when the machine is exposed to high temps expansion is not even, and usually results in translation of the housings; instead of outward expansion from a fixed point, which can bend a shaft; and lead to premature bearing failure.
So i could be wrong as it relates to this turbo, but i see similarities with the bearings and housings, with what is experience with oil and gas pumps that are not designed to deal with extreme applications.
Even if the parts are bolted solid, thermal expansion must be such that there is no relative movement of the housing with the overhang of the shaft, to create a new bending stress which was probably not accounted for by the designers.