Hey, Aren't Machines Supposed to Wear Out?
Jim Fitch, Noria
Corporation
Posted 12-26-05
The old expression is that death and taxes are the only
certainties in life. Some suggest that the same applies to
machinery. We know that if a machine generates a profit, taxes
are levied on that profit. But how about death? Is machine
mortality also inevitable?
Let’s take a closer look. According to Massachusetts
Institute of Technology professor emeritus Ernest Rabinowicz,
three things cause machines to lose their usefulness: obsolescence,
accidents and surface degradation.
Without question, obsolescence is fundamental to the evolution
of engineering and technology. The old must make way for the
new. Yet some inventions have long life cycles – the
grease fitting, for example. Its design has changed little
since Oscar Zerk invented it in the early 1920s, yet is still
widely used. The automobile, on the other hand, is dynamic
and in constant flux. While the classics cars live on into
perpetuity, most cars face practical obsolescence long before
they are functionally inoperable.
Accidents and other forms of human agency events can put
a machine in imminent danger as well. Two identical machines
working in identical work environments but operated by two
different individuals can exhibit dissimilar reliability and
operating lifespans. The dissimilarities are typically operator
(human) induced. Human agency failures also apply to errors
in machine design and manufacturing.
Rabinowicz’s third reason why machines lose usefulness
deals with the world of tribology (the study of wear, friction
and lubrication). He describes this as surface degradation,
which can be divided into chemical degradation (corrosion)
and mechanical damage. The protection of a machine’s
internal surfaces from chemical damage (20 percent) is largely
affected by controllable conditions. Consider the following
causes of chemical damage and the potential for their control
or intervention by maintenance practices:
- Lubricants with ineffective or distressed barrier-film
corrosion inhibitors
- Lubricants prone to rapid oxidation (acid producing)
- Crankcase lubricants with impaired alkalinity reserve
(acid neutralizing)
- Overextended oil change intervals
- Oil contamination by water and/or acids from the work
environment
- Uncontrolled growth of biological contamination
- Moist headspace of tanks, sumps and other lubrication
compartments
- High operating temperatures
- Improper use of chemically aggressive anti-scuff additives
- Improper preservation of stored or laid-up equipment and
improper protection from moisture and corrosion agents
- Lubricants that are incompatible with seals, process chemicals,
machine metallurgy or surface treatments
Mechanical surface degradation is divided into abrasion,
fatigue and adhesion. Let’s examine these wear modes
that correspond to roughly 50 percent of why machines are
removed from service. More specifically, let’s consider
the extent to which this destruction can be controlled or
stopped.

MIT’s Ernest Rabinowicz outlined the causes
related to machines losing their usefulness.
Two-body Abrasion
Perhaps 20 to 30 percent of abrasive wear is two-body. In
this case, two surfaces slide against each other, such as
a shaft rotating within a stationary journal bearing. The
asperities (high points) of the harder surface (shaft) tend
to plow or gouge the softer surface like a file.
Can this be controlled? Not in every case, but it probably
can in the majority of cases. Ample oil film generation is
all that’s needed. This can be designed into the machine
by proper selection of bearing configuration and size, for
instance. Operating temperature and lubricant viscosity impact
film thickness, as well. Important mechanical conditions such
as misalignment, unbalance, overloading, dry starts and sudden
coast-downs also play a vital role and are generally controllable.
Three-body Abrasion
When a solid foreign body is interposed between two surfaces
in relative sliding motion, a more severe and common form
of surface destruction can occur. This foreign body is a hard
particle in the general size range of the oil film thickness.
These particles, typically invisible to the unaided eye, have
the potential to be massively destructive.
A particle of the right size can function like a microscopic
cutting tool to produce furrows in the opposing surface. However,
unlike two-body abrasion in which the soft surface plays a
sacrificial role, in three-body abrasion, the particle can
inflict equal damage on both hard and soft surfaces. Some
researchers believe three-body abrasion is responsible for
as much as 80 percent of all wear in machinery.
Can three-body abrasion be controlled? Absolutely. The vast
majority of the microscopic particles originate as terrain
dust, previously airborne. When airborne contaminants become
ingested into the machine and mixed with the oil or grease,
human agency failure occurs. It’s human agency because
these wrecking-crew particles aren’t part of the machine’s
original bill of materials. They were allowed to ingress during
operation, often due to neglect and poor maintenance practices.
Over time, an oil can become more of a honing compound than
a lubricating medium.
Fatigue
Fatigue is a broad term that can relate to bending fatigue
(for example, a gear tooth) on a macro scale or contact fatigue
(for example, pitting) on a micro scale. The latter is the
dominant case and occurs typically in rolling contacts such
as at the pitch line of gear teeth and the load zone of rolling
element bearing raceways. It typically initiates as micro
pitting and then advances to macro pitting. A final stage
would be large destructive spalls.
Contact fatigue is the greatest when loads are permitted
to concentrate on surface asperities, shoulders of dents and
where particles bridge surfaces under load. Surface fatigue
is influenced by numerous conditions including surface roughness,
surface hardness, viscosity, fluid pressure-viscosity coefficient,
operating loads and speeds, moisture contamination and particle
size distribution. With few exceptions, most of these conditions
are within the realm of control, either at the machine design
stage or at an operating and maintenance stage. One large
rolling element bearing maker has stated that its bearings
can have “infinite life when particles larger than the
oil film are removed from the oil.”
Adhesive Wear
Unlike surface fatigue that takes time to initiate, adhesive
wear can occur immediately. Under severe boundary sliding
conditions, surfaces of like metals can literally spot-weld
together. Heavily loaded, slow-moving machines are the most
prone to adhesive wear – especially if surfaces slide
over considerable distance, building frictional heat (for
example, large meshing gear teeth).
Also known as scuffing and galling, adhesive wear may be
the least controllable as compared to contact fatigue and
abrasion. More often, it’s the extent or rate of wear
that’s most controllable. When machines are well-engineered,
well-manufactured, properly commissioned and operated within
rated loads and speeds, adhesive wear is usually minimal.
However, when loads are exceedingly high, there may be a need
to deploy surface-active additives or solid lubricants.
Machines Don’t Just Die...
They’re Murdered
For some machines, trying to stop the progress of wear is
like trying to defy gravity. We can’t escape the inevitable.
Many machines perhaps are already on life support –
they are too far gone. However, this is just for some machines,
not all. A high percentage of lubricated machines in normal
service can have a seemingly infinite life span. They are
less prone to wear and failure when well-maintained. This
is due to the many reasons just discussed relating to the
environment and operating conditions to which we expose our
machine’s surfaces.
You’ve probably heard the word “risk” defined
as the probability of failure multiplied by the consequence
of failure. When it comes to machine reliability, the consequence
of failure may not be within practical control, but the probability
of failure may be.
This article outlined the vital impact of human agency on
machine reliability. The frequency of human agency failures
tends to run inversely proportional to such factors as training,
performance metrics and reliability culture.
Consider this: Some plant pros believe that maintenance has
two problems:
- It’s broken because we didn’t work on it.
- It’s broken because we did work on it.
This is the maintenance paradox, no doubt. Anyone in the
maintenance field has likely experienced it firsthand. Yet
the answer to solving the paradox lies within, by simply restating
the problems as follows:
- It’s broken because we didn’t know how to
prevent it from breaking. Or, it’s broken because
we didn’t know it was breaking and therefore didn’t
work on it.
- It’s broken because we didn’t know it wasn’t
breaking and worked on it anyway. Or, it’s broken
because we didn’t know how working on it might cause
it to break.
“We didn’t know” is the common, operative
phrase. Like wear, it is controllable, but only when an initiative
is taken to empower maintenance organizations through knowledge.
So, no, machines aren’t supposed to wear out. Yet they
often do. If you investigate why, you’ll likely find
they were, in fact, murdered. If you follow the root cause
trail, you’ll likely find a smoking gun in the hands
of one or more well-intentioned individuals (operator, craftsman,
mechanic, engineer, etc.) who simply didn’t know any
better.
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