The rolling-contact fatigue properties of crystallized glass ceramic balls together with AISI M-1, AISI M-50, Halmo, and WB-49 alloy steel balls tempered to various hardness levels were determined in the NASA spin rig and in the five-ball fatigue tester. A continuous increase in fatigue life and load capacity for each steel was observed with increased ball hardness. These results correlate with resistance to plastic deformation as measured with spherical specimens in rolling contact but do not correlate with elastic limit and yield strength measured for bar specimens. These bar specimens showed optimum values at intermediate hardness levels. Extremely low scatter in fatigue life for the ceramic balls indicate that the degree of structural homogeneity may be an important factor in life scatter of bearing materials.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
December 1961
This article was originally published in
Journal of Basic Engineering
Research Papers
Rolling-Contact Fatigue Studies With Four Tool Steels and a Crystallized Glass Ceramic
Erwin V. Zaretsky,
Erwin V. Zaretsky
Lewis Research Center, NASA, Cleveland, Ohio
Search for other works by this author on:
William J. Anderson
William J. Anderson
Lewis Research Center, NASA, Cleveland, Ohio
Search for other works by this author on:
Erwin V. Zaretsky
Lewis Research Center, NASA, Cleveland, Ohio
William J. Anderson
Lewis Research Center, NASA, Cleveland, Ohio
J. Basic Eng. Dec 1961, 83(4): 603-610 (8 pages)
Published Online: December 1, 1961
Article history
Received:
December 20, 1960
Online:
November 4, 2011
Article
Article discussed|
View article
Connected Content
Citation
Zaretsky, E. V., and Anderson, W. J. (December 1, 1961). "Rolling-Contact Fatigue Studies With Four Tool Steels and a Crystallized Glass Ceramic." ASME. J. Basic Eng. December 1961; 83(4): 603–610. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.3662277
Download citation file:
22
Views
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Development and Validation of Machine-Learned Actuator Line Model for Hydrokinetic Turbine Rotor
J. Fluids Eng (August 2025)
Investigation of the Surface Pressure and Thrust Generated by a Tilt Distributed Electric Propulsion Wing
J. Fluids Eng (August 2025)
Related Articles
Discussion: “Rolling-Contact Fatigue Studies With Four Tool Steels and a Crystallized Glass Ceramic” (Zaretsky, Erwin V., and Anderson, William J., 1961, ASME J. Basic Eng., 83, pp. 603–610)
J. Basic Eng (December,1961)
A 3D Finite Element Study of Fatigue Life Dispersion in Rolling Line Contacts
J. Tribol (October,2011)
Lubricant and Ball Steel Effects on Fatigue Life
J. of Lubrication Tech (April,1971)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
Compromise between Tensile and Fatigue Strength
New Advanced High Strength Steels: Optimizing Properties
Increase of Readiness Level of a Powder Metallurgy Steel for Aerospace Applications
Bearing and Transmission Steels Technology
Verifying of a Network Cryptographic Protocol Using the Model Checking Tools
International Conference on Software Technology and Engineering (ICSTE 2012)