SPM Spectrum Measurement
The resonance frequency of the SPM shock pulse transducer, calibrated to 32 kHz, constitutes the ideal carrier wave for transients caused by shocks. The output of this transducer is the same type of demodulated signal produced by ' enveloping', with this important difference: both frequency and amplitude response of the SPM transducer are precisely tuned, so there is no need to find uncertain and shifting machine resonances to get a signal. The measuring system measures the shock amplitude by a shock pulse measurement with the dBm/dBc or the LR/HR method. The results are the bearing condition data, evaluated in green-yellow-red. The second measurement produces a time record that is subjected to a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT). The resulting spectrum is used mostly for pattern recognition. Spectrum line amplitudes are influenced by too many factors to be reliable condition indicators, so all condition evaluation is based on the dBm or the HR values.
One unit for amplitude in an SPM spectrum is SD (Shock Distribution unit), where each spectrum is scaled so that the total RMS value of all spectrum lines = 100 SD = the RMS value of the time record. The alternative is SL (Shock Level unit), the RMS value of the frequency component in decibels. Alert levels are manually set for each symptom to show evaluated results in green - yellow - red. Various types of spectra can be produced.
*Pattern recognition demands precise data on the bearing and exact measurement of the rpm. The rpm should preferably be measured, not preset. The factors that define the bearing frequencies are obtained from the bearing catalog in Condmaster by stating the ISO bearing number.