scalebearing
Scalebearing is a term used in mechanical engineering to denote a bearing concept or family designed to be scalable in size and load capacity. In this sense, a scalebearing arrangement uses modular components and geometries whose critical dimensions can be proportionally scaled to match different shaft diameters and service requirements, enabling a single bearing platform to suit multiple machine sizes. Proponents argue that scalebearing can reduce procurement complexity, simplify spare parts inventories, and shorten redesign cycles in product families with variable scales, such as robotics, automation, and aerospace subsystems. Typical design features include scalable inner and outer ring geometries, standardized inserts or cartridges, and proportional lubrication channels to maintain similar contact pressures and stiffness across scales. Engineering challenges include preserving performance across the full scale range, maintaining tight tolerances, ensuring lubrication and sealing remain effective, and validating dynamic behavior through scale-model testing. Materials selection must support wide ranges of loads and tribological conditions, and manufacturing methods should allow accurate scaling of features.
In some maintenance contexts, scalebearing is also used informally to describe the development of mineral scale
See also: bearing, scaling, modular design, mechanical design families.