by Tony » Tue Jun 12, 2007 8:58 pm
The two commercial blower rotors that I have here, both have had very light spot welded on balance weights added. There is no obvious vibration problem with either rotor.
The trick seems to be to build a very light wheel, but attach it to a fairly heavy hub. The mass of the hub will absorb any slight residual unbalance. Direct coupling a blower rotor to a motor seems to work very well, because the motor frame is heavy enough to absorb any slight vibration. Motor bearings are always designed to be fairly massive, to absorb side loads from very tightly stretched pulley belts. So a bit of blower rotor wobble is unlikely to destroy the motor bearings.
Balance might be more critical if the rotor is supported only by a very short low mass drive shaft with just a small diameter pulley, and then driven to very high speed. But fitting a blower rotor direct onto the motor shaft is probably a much better idea for many reasons.
My experience has been that vibration is a non issue, but a quick static balance on knife edges is pretty easy to arrange, and more than sufficient.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.