Laser Alignment Method
Laser Alignment Method
After the equipment has been aligned, some additional tasks and checks
should be performed.
Make sure that each shaft turns freely with the coupling hubs installed.
The safety equipment should be removed and the equipment energized
The driver should be “bumped” to check for proper rotation.
Reinstall the safety precautions and complete the assembly of the coupling per
the installation instructions.
Rotate the coupled shafts to ensure they turn freely.
Install the coupling guards per OSHA or applicable requirements.
The safety equipment should be removed and the equipment energized.
Once the pump is ready to operate, the pump and piping that has been drained
should be filled. As the pump and the system piping is filled, observe for any piping
distortion due to improperly supported piping. Poorly supported piping may cause
misalignment.
After the piping is installed, the pump unit is operated under normal conditions
and is thoroughly warm, stop the pump unit to recheck alignment while it is warm. This
also ensures that there is no additional pipe strain.
If additional alignment is required of more than 0.002” from the pipe free
condition, the additional piping strain should be corrected. Additional discussion on
piping installation can be found in another article.
For high energy and petroleum pumps, the pump and driver feet are drilled and
doweled at two locations, near the thrust bearing end, after the final alignment is
complete and meets the specifications.
Documentation of the alignment is important to the installation and operation of
the equipment. Make a record of the final alignment tolerance on an alignment form or
data sheet. This should be placed in the equipment’s history file. This provides not only
proof of final condition, but allows a starting point and historical data for the future.
For work done in the future, this information will allow for the alignment to be
done quicker and smoother, saving set up time. In will also provide a basis to allow for
measurement of operational time.
Reporting or recording sheets can be developed to include information on soft
feet, pipe stress and strain, coupling and shaft runouts, installation conditions such as
bolts being found loose, and specifying the initial, desired, and final alignment
information.
The sheet should also provide a location for identification of the persons
completing the work to be documented. This places responsibility of quality work on
individuals, and provides learning opportunities if a failure occurs.
Reported data allows for troubleshooting and root cause analysis of equipment
failures. The data can be used to compare the “as discovered” condition and the “as
completed” condition. This can be particularly useful for equipment with chronic
abnormal behavior.
Another useful tool for recording data are digital photos. Pictures of the shaft,
coupling, base, and foundation conditions can be stored. These could be used in the
future during set up to determine any special needs or how the installation was left.
Although alignment should not be scheduled to be rechecked with the frequency
of preventative maintenance procedures, it should be rechecked when observations are
made in regards to the settling of the base, foundation, or soils, changing of the piping
system, process changes, or seasonal temperature changes.
For a new installation, the alignment should be scheduled to be rechecked 3-6
months after the initial installation and alignment.