A Shift in Bearing Architecture
A Conversation on Changing Technology at MPT Expo 2023
Randy Stott, publisher of Power Transmission Engineering and Gear Technology magazines, recently sat down with Norm Parker, technical fellow and technical manager for Torque Transfer Systems at Stellantis, to discuss bearing technology during the Motion + Power Technology Expo in Detroit.
How is the development of EV transmissions affecting the design and specification of bearings?
For automotive, we have a coaxial version which you might think of as a lucid design and then an offset version, which will be more like your Tesla design or the parallel axis version. What we might call Tesla is pretty much like a transfer case, a gear driven transfer case, if you will.
The lucid version is just a compact planetary. Nothing new there. What does make these different is we’re putting a ton of speed and power into these boxes like we haven’t before, and we’re seeing a big uptick from bearing manufacturers in premium features. For the load carrying side, we’re looking at a lot of nitriding,, a lot of carbon-nitriding, retained austenite control, custom quenching features, grain refinement, premium steels, etc.
On the speed handling side, we’re seeing your typical drivers for speed control. We’re seeing reduced tolerances. We’re seeing surface finish controls, custom cages, reduce run out control, that sort of thing.
What are the biggest challenges for bearings in the EV environment?