Critical Speed of Shafts

critical speed of shafts

The critical speed is the theoretical angular velocity which excites the natural frequency of a rotating object, such as a shaft. As the speed of rotation approaches the objects natural frequency, the object begins to resonate which dramatically increases systemic vibration. The resulting resonance occurs regardless of orientation.

When the rotational speed is equal to the numerical value of the natural vibration then that speed is called critical speed.

For a rotating shaft there is a speed at which, for any small initial deflection, the centrifugal force is equal to the elastic restoring force. At this point the deflection increases greatly and the shaft is said to “whirl”. Below and above this speed this effect is very much reduced. This critical (whirling speed) is dependent on the shaft dimensions, the shaft material and the shaft loads.

All rotating shafts, even in the absence of external load, deflect during rotation. No shaft is perfectly straight and no shaft with attached masses is perfectly statically balanced such that the centre of gravity coincides with the axis of rotation.

At Morse Air Systems, we calculate the critical speed of our fan designs. We ensure the operation speed is at least 20 % either side of the calculated critical speed. This will result in the fan running well outside the “danger zone”.

Explore more about Morse Air Systems

Is your fan built to last?

The rotating component of a fan is called an impeller, and is arguable the most important part of the fan. The impeller is designed from

Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Did you know that air weighs 1.2 kg per cubic meter and when a fan moves this weight of air energy is required. Take an

Breakdown Service

Picture above: our replacement along side the damaged version. Interesting talking point but not much good for moving air. Recently “A” customer, who shall remain

Powering Your Fan

At Morse Air Systems we are constantly coming across power problems brought to us by our customers. Here are a few of them to show

The Air We Breathe!

4 Tonnes chips per hour = 100 Tonnes air per hour. Spare a thought for the air that we breathe As humans, we breathe normally

My Fan is too Noisy

These days noise is an important environmental and OH&S issue. For the most part when dealing with fans it is the “rush” or roar at

What is a Fan – Fan Laws

Part 1 in a Technical Series by Michael Morse. A fan is a volume machine that shovels air. The bigger the shovel the greater the

Critical Speed of Shafts

The critical speed is the theoretical angular velocity which excites the natural frequency of a rotating object, such as a shaft. As the speed of

High Temp Plug Fan for Furnace Engineering

Morse Air Systems has recently been supplying Furnace Engineering with a new generation high temperature plug fan. Furnace Engineering is one of Australia’s premier designers

Split Cooling Fans

Some years ago John Welsh Gearboxes had a cooling fan on the main drive shaft that had failed and needed urgent replacement. Morse designed and

Newsletters

Our latest Newsletters “Air Flow” Spring 2017 Summer 2016-17 Winter 2016 Summer 2015-16 Winter 2015 Summer 2014-15 Autumn 2014 Summer 2013-14 Winter 2013 Summer 2012-13