Wireless Condition Monitoring for Thrust Bearing End Play

Wireless condition monitoring is often framed as a bold leap into digital transformation. But sometimes its real value is quieter, more practical. It helps us notice what is beginning to drift before it becomes a failure we cannot ignore.

This case study, led by Ares Panagoulias at Hydro, shows exactly that. A large U.S. midstream operator used wireless vibration monitoring not to chase innovation for its own sake, but to solve a specific mechanical problem early. The issue was excessive thrust bearing end play in a between bearings centrifugal pump. Left unchecked, it could have led to far greater damage and downtime.

A Practical Monitoring Strategy

The asset in question was a horizontal, single stage BB1 pump running at mostly fixed speed. Four wireless triaxial accelerometers were mounted at key bearing locations on both the pump and motor housings. Each sensor captured vibration across multiple frequency ranges and also tracked surface temperature.

What stands out is the discipline behind the data strategy. A full time waveform was captured once per hour. Overall vibration values were collected every five minutes. If vibration exceeded a preset alarm threshold, an additional waveform was triggered automatically.

This balanced approach avoided overwhelming the system with continuous high density data. At the same time, it ensured the team could respond quickly when behavior changed. Alerts were sent directly to both the operator and the service provider’s diagnostic team. The system was responsive without being noisy.

The First Signs of Trouble

After several months of baseline operation, the pump outboard bearing began to show elevated vibration. The vertical direction peaked at roughly 0.37 inches per second RMS. Spectral data revealed a dominant running speed component with multiple harmonics. Time waveforms showed periodic impacts consistent with mechanical looseness.

What is important here is pattern recognition. The motor bearings remained stable. The inboard pump bearing showed similar behavior but at lower amplitude. This distribution pointed to a localized mechanical issue within the pump itself rather than a system wide excitation or hydraulic instability.

Phase analysis helped narrow the possibilities further. The vibration behavior did not match hydraulic instability, misalignment, or resonance. The combination of harmonics and impact signatures strongly suggested mechanical looseness. Among likely causes, excessive thrust bearing end play emerged as the most probable.

The maintenance recommendation was focused and intentional. Inspect thrust bearing clearance at the pump outboard end. Verify alignment. Nothing more.

Confirmation in the Field

Inspection confirmed the diagnosis. Axial measurements showed thrust bearing end play at 0.009 inches. After adjustment, it was reduced to 0.004 inches, bringing it back into an acceptable range. No abnormal wear was found elsewhere.

Once returned to service, the improvement was immediate. Overall velocity dropped by roughly 50 percent, falling below 0.20 inches per second RMS. Acceleration levels decreased by about 70 percent. The impact signatures seen before maintenance largely disappeared.

This immediate validation matters. Continuous monitoring did not just detect the issue. It confirmed that the corrective action truly resolved it.

The Larger Lesson

This story is not about advanced analytics or fully autonomous plants. It is about visibility, discipline, and expertise.

Wireless condition monitoring becomes powerful when it is paired with thoughtful sensor placement, structured data collection, and experienced interpretation. The value does not come from data volume alone. It comes from understanding how vibration behavior connects to pump design, operating context, and known failure modes.

In midstream operations, even a modest mechanical correction like adjusting thrust bearing clearance can prevent larger reliability events. When abnormal vibration is detected early, maintenance shifts from reactive to deliberate. Uncertainty drops. Downtime risk shrinks.

In the end, this is what reliability work often feels like. Quiet adjustments made before anyone outside the maintenance team ever notices there was a problem. And that quiet prevention is often the most meaningful success of all.

Read the full case study in Pumps & Systems.

Interested in applying this approach across your fleet? Learn how disciplined monitoring and expert analysis can improve reliability across your critical assets, here.

Case Study- From Liability to Reliability

Our latest article in Pumps & Systems Magazine discusses a case where aging in‑line OH4 pumps were becoming a costly reliability risk after nearly three decades of operation.

This case study shows how a strategic retrofit to an API OH3 design dramatically improved bearing and seal reliability, reduced maintenance effort, and preserved the original footprint—all without disrupting operations. Discover how rethinking legacy equipment turned a chronic maintenance liability into a long‑term reliability win.

Read the full case study here.

Read another case study written by Freddy Cardenas Linero, highlighting a hydraulic modification for reduced flow, here.

Learn more about our Hydro Middle East service centers, where this upgrade was performed, here.

Maintenance technician reviewing equipment performance data on a tablet via a wireless sensor during an industrial inspection

Understanding What Vibration Signals Really Mean

One of the most persistent challenges in condition monitoring and vibration analysis is not finding signals. Modern wireless condition monitoring systems are excellent at that. The harder problem is understanding what those signals actually mean within the context of rotating equipment dynamics.

We recently evaluated a pump at a midstream facility where industrial vibration analysis showed vibration levels increasing sharply as operating speed approached roughly 1125 rpm. The frequency spectrum made the issue immediately visible. A dominant 10× running speed harmonic emerged, then largely disappeared as speed moved away from that range.

At first glance, the solution seems obvious. Avoid that speed.

In midstream operations, however, it is rarely that simple. Flow requirements, fluid properties, and system demand often dictate operating speeds. Blocking off ranges in a variable frequency drive (VFD) is not always practical, and in many cases, not possible at all.

That is where the real work begins.

The challenge was not detecting vibration. It was determining when a structural resonance was actually being excited, how strong the response was across speed and load, and what that meant for bearings, seals, and the overall machine train over time. Without that engineering context, the signal alone is easy to misinterpret.

When we analyzed the data across the full operating envelope, the picture became clearer. This was not a machine in distress. It was a predictable speed-dependent resonance that was only excited under very specific operating conditions.

That distinction matters, because it fundamentally changes the solution.

The answer is not simply “don’t run there.” The answer is engineering the system to shift the resonance, not forcing operations to work around it. That may involve stiffness changes, mass adjustments, or other design-level interventions that address the root cause rather than the symptom.

This is the gap between monitoring and reliability. Detecting issues is only the first step. Long-term reliability comes from engineering-led condition monitoring, where system behavior is understood and engineering judgment is applied to turn signals into meaningful decisions.

Seeing a signal is easy. Understanding it is harder. If you are wrestling with pump resonance, vibration behavior, or recurring condition monitoring alarms that never quite turn into answers, let’s talk.

Case Study- Improving Reliability of Descale Pumps

Our latest article in World Pumps Magazine discusses a case where advanced technology, targeted upgrades, and thinking outside the box helped a steel mill avoid costly downtime.

When facing repeated failures of their descale pumps, Hydro helped the mill salvage enough usable components from the failed pieces of equipment to return a fully functional, upgraded piece of equipment to service. By performing and in-depth root cause analysis and implementing material and design upgrades, the equipment has been transformed from a bad actor to a reliable piece of equipment.

Read the full case study here.

Case Study- Avoiding Downtime with Condition Monitoring

Our latest article in Pumps & Systems Magazine demonstrates how early warnings from wireless condition monitoring helped industrial teams prevent costly failures and avoid unnecessary downtime—before problems became critical. This article highlights how scalable wireless condition monitoring is transforming industrial maintenance by providing continuous, actionable insight into machine health.

Through two real‑world case studies—a cold‑climate pump system and a critical chemical plant blower—it shows how subtle vibration trends and bearing wear were identified early, enabling informed decision‑making and avoiding unnecessary shutdowns or costly failures. Together, the examples demonstrate how wireless monitoring supports predictive maintenance strategies that reduce risk, downtime, and operational costs.

Read the full case study here or find more condition monitoring case studies on our Centaur Knowledge Exchange.

Ready to experience the benefits of wireless condition monitoring yourself? Apply for an obligation-free trial of our Centaur condition monitoring solution.