Graphite Metallizing Corporation will be exhibiting at the 45th Turbomachinery and 32nd Pump Symposia (TPS) from September 12 - 15. This exhibition will be held at the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston.
Please stop by and visit us at Booth #1414.
To learn more about this exhibition, click here.
Bearings and bushings recommended for high temperature service and for pump applications where the pumpage cannot be relied upon to lubricate the shaft bearing or wear parts
Monday, September 12, 2016
Thursday, June 16, 2016
GRAPHALLOY Tames "Bad Actor" Pump
A recent article in World Pumps magazine focused on a major oil refinery in Texas that was experiencing breakage problems with their vertical turbine pump. The plant’s engineers knew that there was a serious problem when the shaft broke twice - in exactly the same place - in less than three years.
The pump was a 4-stage, 14 GH Byron Jackson vertical turbine pump in isopentane service. A thorough inspection and analysis by the pump repair shop revealed the underlying issue was not with the shaft itself but with the use of the wrong type of bearing materials.
As noted in the article - “Alloy Bearings Cure Breakage Problems” - the bronze bearings should have been able to withstand exposure to the isopentane being pumped. However, there was an occasional inflow of caustic soda which reacted with the bronze.
The bronze bearings were replaced with GRAPHALLOY® nickel-grade bearings. Since the repair, the pump has been operating efficiently for almost three years with no reports of any problems.
Based on a recommendation from an engineer at the refinery, a GRAPHALLLOY nickel-grade material that would withstand 400°C and offer self-lubricating and corrosion resistant properties was chosen. GRAPHALLOY bushings were installed into the stuffing box, column, bowl and suction bell bearing fits.
According to the sales engineer at the pump repair shop, “GRAPHALLOY is a material that is compatible with a wide range of pumped liquids and offers a good option in high temperature applications.”
GRAPHALLOY resists attack by most corrosive liquids including sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, chlorine water and caustics and can withstand high temperatures without deforming or burning.
To read the full article, please click here.
Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Facility Chooses Graphite-Metal Alloy Bearings
by Eric Ford
Vice President, Graphite Metallizing Corporation
Pumps & Systems, April 2016
Sometimes
saving money can be expensive. Ads showing that an appliance is more
energy efficient than its competition can be convincing, but perhaps
spending $800 on a new refrigerator would only save $10 a year. The
problem is not limited to consumer goods. Selecting the wrong
replacement parts for industrial equipment can also prove to be costly.
One Midwest refinery encountered this issue when it replaced the
original graphite-metal alloy bearings on two butane cavern pumps with
bronze bearings. While the original bearings lasted almost a quarter of a
century, the new bronze bearings failed within four years. Just the
labor to remove the pump ended up costing far more than purchasing
higher-quality bearings would have.
Limestone Cavern
The refinery was built in the early 1900s. Over the past century, it has undergone extensive reconfiguration and expansion. It can process 125,000 barrels per day (bpd) of sweet or sour crude. Four hundred feet beneath the refinery lies a limestone cavern used for butane storage.
In 1980, the plant purchased a pair of 13-stage, deep-well cavern pumps to move product out of the cavern. Designed to fit on the existing 16-inch, 300-pound flanges with mechanical seals and rigid flange couplings, the pumps came with 408 feet of column and stainless-steel shafting. Originally, they were designed to pump 350 gallons per minute of propane, but this later changed to butane. Although butane is slightly heavier—with a specific gravity of 0.58 versus propane's 0.51—it was well within pump specifications. The equipment was also designed to pump water if it infiltrated the cavern. The pumps operate one at a time in a balanced mode so that they have the same number of operating hours, rather than operating as the primary and the other as a standby.
The refinery was built in the early 1900s. Over the past century, it has undergone extensive reconfiguration and expansion. It can process 125,000 barrels per day (bpd) of sweet or sour crude. Four hundred feet beneath the refinery lies a limestone cavern used for butane storage.
In 1980, the plant purchased a pair of 13-stage, deep-well cavern pumps to move product out of the cavern. Designed to fit on the existing 16-inch, 300-pound flanges with mechanical seals and rigid flange couplings, the pumps came with 408 feet of column and stainless-steel shafting. Originally, they were designed to pump 350 gallons per minute of propane, but this later changed to butane. Although butane is slightly heavier—with a specific gravity of 0.58 versus propane's 0.51—it was well within pump specifications. The equipment was also designed to pump water if it infiltrated the cavern. The pumps operate one at a time in a balanced mode so that they have the same number of operating hours, rather than operating as the primary and the other as a standby.
Both pumps were initially fitted with self-lubricating graphite-metal
alloy composite bearings. These composites consist of a metal
impregnated into a graphite substrate under high temperature and
pressure. This process gives the material its strength. Such components
can be manufactured with tighter-than-normal clearances. Any wear or
contact exposes the graphite, providing a low-friction surface.
Depending on the intended use, these composites can be made using metal
alloys including Babbitt, bronze, copper, iron, nickel and silver. The
graphite does not have a melting point and does not soften at high
temperatures, so it can be used in non-oxidizing temperatures up to
1,000 F (538 C) and up to 750 F (400 C) in air. It does not get brittle
at temperatures as low as minus 450 F (minus 268 C).
The original graphite-metal alloy bearings lasted from initial
installation in 1980 until 2004. However, the pump original equipment
manufacturer (OEM) recommended using bronze as replacement bearings,
which was a less expensive option. In many instances, it makes sense to
go with the lower-cost bearings. However, this was not one of those
times. While bronze performs well under normal operating conditions when
moving product, it does not do well during dry-run conditions. The
problem is one of lubricity.
In these deep-well pumps, the product lubricates the bushings on its
way up and out of the pump. During startup, the pump has to run dry for
10 to 15 seconds before product is moved to the top of the pump. Because
bronze is not self-lubricating or non-galling, the pumps would seize
during this time, and the bearings needed to be replaced after an
average of just nine months.
With an above-ground pump, repairs might be fairly straightforward. That was not the case with these cavern pumps. To repair them, technicians had to pull each pump out of the ground, one 10-foot section at a time, and disassemble it along the way. Forty bearings needed replacement, one for each section. Each pump then had to be assembled and lowered, section by section, before it could be put back into service. The cost of doing this just one time was more than 20 times the cost differential between the self-lubricating bearings and the bronze bearings.
When engineers with experience at this plant returned to work at the refinery, they observed the situation and recommended the plant return to the approach that had worked before. In this case, it was an easy financial decision now that replacement labor costs were well-known.
The first pump had its bronze line shaft bearings and bowl bushings replaced with graphite-Babbitt grade bearings. Five years later, both pumps continue to operate without issue, allowing maintenance personnel to put time and budget toward improving other aspects of the refinery.
With an above-ground pump, repairs might be fairly straightforward. That was not the case with these cavern pumps. To repair them, technicians had to pull each pump out of the ground, one 10-foot section at a time, and disassemble it along the way. Forty bearings needed replacement, one for each section. Each pump then had to be assembled and lowered, section by section, before it could be put back into service. The cost of doing this just one time was more than 20 times the cost differential between the self-lubricating bearings and the bronze bearings.
When engineers with experience at this plant returned to work at the refinery, they observed the situation and recommended the plant return to the approach that had worked before. In this case, it was an easy financial decision now that replacement labor costs were well-known.
The first pump had its bronze line shaft bearings and bowl bushings replaced with graphite-Babbitt grade bearings. Five years later, both pumps continue to operate without issue, allowing maintenance personnel to put time and budget toward improving other aspects of the refinery.
Beyond Cavern Bearings
Bronze or other materials with short dry-run capabilities are a good fit in some situations, but not for vertical pumps operating under possible dry-run conditions, especially with low specific gravity fluids. These vertical pumps are not limited to hydrocarbons or refinery operations. They are also used in potable water service in places that require deep-well pumps.
Twenty years ago, pump operators would install a food-grade bearing grease drip system that an operator could turn on five or 10 minutes before startup that would ensure bearings were lubricated all the way down the shaft. Now regulators do not allow anything to be introduced into these water wells. As a result, some operators have switched to graphite-metal alloy bearings that can withstand these startup conditions.
Bronze or other materials with short dry-run capabilities are a good fit in some situations, but not for vertical pumps operating under possible dry-run conditions, especially with low specific gravity fluids. These vertical pumps are not limited to hydrocarbons or refinery operations. They are also used in potable water service in places that require deep-well pumps.
Twenty years ago, pump operators would install a food-grade bearing grease drip system that an operator could turn on five or 10 minutes before startup that would ensure bearings were lubricated all the way down the shaft. Now regulators do not allow anything to be introduced into these water wells. As a result, some operators have switched to graphite-metal alloy bearings that can withstand these startup conditions.
Thursday, March 17, 2016
David Moser Joins Sales Team at GRAPHALLOY
Graphite Metallizing Corporation, the manufacturer of self-lubricating GRAPHALLOY® bushing materials for pumps
and process equipment, has appointed David Moser as Sales Engineering
Representative for Texas, Louisiana and southern Arkansas.
Moser holds a B.S. degree in Mechanical
Engineering Technology from Southern Polytechnic State University. He
has has over twenty years experience in the industrial market place,
much of it with a manufacturer of centrifugal pumps. Moser will be based
out of his Houston office.
“David's extensive experience with industrial
machinery will help our customers use GRAPHALLOY to achieve greater
equipment reliability,” stated Eben Walker, General Manager of Graphite
Metallizing. "We are pleased to have David join our team.”
Graphite Metallizing Corporation of Yonkers,
NY has been solving tough bearing problems for over 100 years. The
company began in 1913 when two engineers developed a method for putting
molten metal into carbon to create a new material called GRAPHALLOY, a
graphite/metal alloy.
GRAPHALLOY bearings have operated for 20 years and longer in some applications. Standard designs are available but most GRAPHALLOY products are custom designed to the unique requirements of the specific application. Graphite Metallizing Corporation is ISO certified.
Labels:
bushings,
graphalloy,
graphite metallizing,
pumps
Thursday, February 18, 2016
GRAPHALLOY® at Asia Turbomachinery & Pump Symposium
Graphite Metalllzing Corporation will be exhibiting at the 2016 Asia Turbomachinery & Pump Symposium from February 22 - 25. The event will be held at the Marina Bay Sands in Singapore.
Please stop by and visit us at Booth #614.
For more information about this Symposium, click here.
Please stop by and visit us at Booth #614.
For more information about this Symposium, click here.
Labels:
graphalloy,
graphite metallizing,
pumps
Monday, January 25, 2016
Graphite Metallizing Holdings Inc Purchases Exalto UK Bearing Business
Graphite Metallizing Holdings Inc (GMHI) has
purchased Exalto UK, the manufacturer and worldwide supplier of water
lubricated bearings, from its Dutch owners, Exalto BV. GMHI, the
US-based manufacturer of bearings, has established a new UK company,
Exalto Bearings UK Ltd, who will continue to
supply the Marine and Pump
Industries worldwide with quality bearings.
Dennis Rawle, European Director of Sales for
GMHI and now Managing Director of Exalto Bearings UK commented, "I have
long been associated with the Exalto
Bearing business and am excited to
continue my involvement in this new chapter for the company."
GMHI specializes in bearings and products
manufactured using GRAPHALLOY®, a unique graphite/metal alloy suitable
for use in the toughest conditions. Rawle adds "the combined bearing
expertise of both Exalto and GMHI means we can offer our customers
bearings to suit any application and the new UK base for GMHI can only
improve the service we can offer our own European customers."
For further information, please contact:
For Exalto Bearings UK
Louisa Quinn
louisa@exalto.co.uk
(+44) 1332 340501
For Exalto Bearings UK
Louisa Quinn
louisa@exalto.co.uk
(+44) 1332 340501
For Graphite Metallizing Holdings Inc
Eben Walker
ebenw@graphalloy.com
(+1) 914 968 8400
Eben Walker
ebenw@graphalloy.com
(+1) 914 968 8400
More information on Exalto Bearings UK and Graphite Metallizing Holdings Incorporated
Exalto Bearings UK
Since 1996, Exalto Bearings UK has been manufacturing the highest quality, rubber-lined and composite cutlass bearings for the Pump and Marine industries. Nobody knows bearings better. We're a proudly British company, trusted by our long-standing customers to create standard as well as custom-made bearings for the world's biggest marine propulsion and pump manufacturers. We pride ourselves on the quality of our products, the speed of our delivery and the friendly and professional service from our small business team.
Since 1996, Exalto Bearings UK has been manufacturing the highest quality, rubber-lined and composite cutlass bearings for the Pump and Marine industries. Nobody knows bearings better. We're a proudly British company, trusted by our long-standing customers to create standard as well as custom-made bearings for the world's biggest marine propulsion and pump manufacturers. We pride ourselves on the quality of our products, the speed of our delivery and the friendly and professional service from our small business team.
Graphite Metallizing Holdings Incorporated
Graphite Metallizing Corporation of Yonkers, NY has been solving tough bearing problems for over 100 years. The company began in 1913 when two engineers developed a method for putting molten metal into carbon to create a new material called GRAPHALLOY®, a graphite/metal alloy.
Graphite Metallizing Corporation of Yonkers, NY has been solving tough bearing problems for over 100 years. The company began in 1913 when two engineers developed a method for putting molten metal into carbon to create a new material called GRAPHALLOY®, a graphite/metal alloy.
Used in the manufacture of bushings, bearings
and other components for machinery and process equipment, GRAPHALLOY
can be the solution to the toughest bearing, bushing, thrust washer, cam
follower, or pillow block bearing design problem. It is available in
over 100 grades with specific properties that meet a wide range of
engineering solutions and specifications.
GRAPHALLOY bearings have operated for 20
years and longer in some applications.Standard designs are available but
most GRAPHALLOY products are custom designed to the unique
requirements of the specific application.
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