This came up on another forum. I’ve known about self aligning TO bearings for some time and my impression was that most of the higher quality TOBs today are self-aligning. My impression was they had become wide spread was to cope with diapraghm clutches and irregular finger alignment. However I’m being told they were actually developed in order to run with constant, light clutch contact - ie, no freeplay. Further, running a self aligning TOB without contact will damage it (?). The internet seems to have articles going both ways.
I known some Fords lately have been set up to run with constant clutch/TOB contact and apparently they are using self aligning TOBs for this purpose, the engineering reason for which I’m at a loss. It’s the chicken and egg question. Were self-aligning TOBs created to achieve constant contact clutch geometry or was constant contact clutch geometry made possible by the availability of self-aligning TOBs made for diapraghm clutch issues? Me, I always run some degree of free play even with self-aligning TOBs.
So, anyone out there well read on this subject and able to set the story straight? I may just be a victim of my own assumptions.
I known some Fords lately have been set up to run with constant clutch/TOB contact and apparently they are using self aligning TOBs for this purpose, the engineering reason for which I’m at a loss. It’s the chicken and egg question. Were self-aligning TOBs created to achieve constant contact clutch geometry or was constant contact clutch geometry made possible by the availability of self-aligning TOBs made for diapraghm clutch issues? Me, I always run some degree of free play even with self-aligning TOBs.
So, anyone out there well read on this subject and able to set the story straight? I may just be a victim of my own assumptions.
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