28 Jul 2021

A mining operation suffered a major bearing seizure on the crankpin of a slurry pump shaft. The pump makers approached Goltens to explore the possibility to repair and restore the crankshaft to original diameter in the workshop.

Inspection revealed the crankpin had suffered severe damage resulting in surface hardness levels as high as 397 HB and heat cracks on the pin surface. Goltens offered a solution to machine the pin to undersize but the pump maker required the pin diameter at original specification.

Alternative repair solution

To meet the requirement, Goltens proposed an alternative repair solution using laser cladding to rebuild the crankpin diameter and machine it back to original size and tolerance. The crankpin was machined to 2 mm undersize to clear all heat cracks and inspected again by MPI. Once satisfied the cracks and hardness were removed from the surface, the shaft was ready for laser cladding to rebuild the crankpin diameter.

Laser cladding is an efficient way to build up any shaft diameter without inducing high temperature

Laser cladding is an efficient way to build up any shaft diameter without inducing high temperature, thus avoiding any kind of distortion or affecting the original metal properties. The process involves a laser beam which creates a molten pool at the workpiece surface, to which the laser coating material is simultaneously added. The result is a layer that is connected with the basic material metallurgically and free of pores and cracks.

Performing blue fitting

The machined crankpin was cladded with 3mm Inconel 625 material. The shaft did not experience any distortion or change in material property. The laser-powder cladding procedure on this shaft material was approved by DNV GL.

The crankpin was machined, honed and polished to final size. A precision-machined ‘bluing’ dummy bearing was used to perform blue fitting to ensure good contact surface. Lastly, a portable CMM, Leica Laser Tracker, was used to check and generate a 3-dimensional report indicating the shaft alignment, geometry and tolerances of the crankpin. The customer was fully satisfied with the final outcome and shaft was sent back to the mines for installation.