Free Engineering Tool
Permissible Residual Unbalance Calculator
Calculate the maximum allowable residual unbalance for any rotor per ISO 21940-11. Enter mass, speed, and balance quality grade.
Results
Permissible Specific Unbalance
Per ISO 21940-11, the permissible specific unbalance (eccentricity) is:
- G — balance quality grade (mm/s)
- n — service speed (RPM)
- ω — angular velocity (rad/s)
Total Permissible Residual Unbalance
Where m is rotor mass in kg. Result Uper is in g·mm when eper is in μm and m in kg.
Balance Quality Grades
| Grade | e·ω (mm/s) | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|
| G0.4 | 0.4 | Gyroscopes, spindles |
| G1.0 | 1.0 | Grinding machine drives |
| G2.5 | 2.5 | Gas/steam turbines, turbochargers |
| G6.3 | 6.3 | Fans, pumps, motors, general machinery |
| G16 | 16 | Agricultural machinery, automobile wheels |
| G40 | 40 | Car wheels, rims |
| G100 | 100 | Complete reciprocating engines |
| G250 | 250 | Four-stroke engines on rigid mounts |
| G630 | 630 | Crankshaft drives (fast diesels) |
| G1600 | 1600 | Slow diesels on rigid mounts |
| G4000 | 4000 | Crankshaft drives (large diesels) |
Practical Example
Given: Rotor mass = 120 kg, Speed = 1500 RPM, Grade = G6.3
ω = 2π × 1500 / 60 = 157.08 rad/s
eper = 6.3 × 1000 / 157.08 = 40.11 μm
Uper = 40.11 × 120 = 4,813 g·mm
Per-plane (2 planes, 50/50): 4,813 / 2 = 2,407 g·mm
⚠️ Note: For disc-like rotors, 50/50 split between planes is acceptable when CG is centered. For long rotors, use the lever rule based on actual CG position relative to correction planes.
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