Jack McGuinn, Senior Editor, has a diverse, 20-year history in manufacturing, including management-level positions in quality assurance and testing; product development; marketing and promotion; and industrial journalism. He has been with Gear Technology since 2005.
In the wide, wide world of moving
parts, the gears required for the big
jobs—the really big jobs—often experience big problems. Proper lubrication of these gears is paramount in industrial applications such as wind turbines, kilns, sugar mills, crushers, heavy construction, offshore drilling rigs, mining and quarrying.
Make no mistake -- lean manufacturing is here to stay. And no wonder. As a fiercely competitive global economy continues to alter companies’ “Main Street” thinking, that relatively new dynamic is spurring the need for “I-need-it-yesterday” production output. And for increasingly more industries -- big or small -- that means getting as lean as you can, as fast as you can.
It is said that “The squeaky wheel
gets the grease.” Ok, but what about gear noise? We talked to three experts with
considerable knowledge and experience
in this area.
We talked energy efficiency with some
major players in the lubricants industry—
but with a focus on their products’
impact regarding energy efficiency of
gears and gearboxes in wind turbines.
Faithful Gear Technology readers may recall that our July 2009 issue contained an update of the deliberations
provided by Bill Bradley. Now, almost two years later, there is an ISO/IEC wind turbine gearbox standard out for draft international standard ballot (ballot closes 2011-05-17).