Bearing Types Reference

Radial, thrust, tapered, needle — when to use each bearing type.

Reference Reference Updated Apr 19, 2026
Reference

Common bearing types

Type Radial Thrust RPM Notes
Deep-groove ball Moderate High Most common — fans, motors, skateboards
Angular contact ball ✓ (axial) High Spindles, machine tools (pair them)
Self-aligning ball Low Medium Tolerates shaft misalignment
Cylindrical roller Heavy Low Medium Machine-tool spindles
Tapered roller Medium Car wheel hubs; handles combined loads
Needle roller Heavy Medium Compact; often gearbox or U-joint
Spherical roller Heavy Low Heavy industrial, shock loads
Thrust ball ✓ (one way) Medium Rotary tables, low-load axial
Tapered thrust ✓ (heavy) Low Heavy axial — crane slew bearings
Plain / sleeve / bushing With flange Medium Simple, low RPM, lubrication needed
Magnetic Very high No contact, needs control system
Ceramic hybrid Ultra-high Low friction, non-magnetic, expensive

Selection tips

  • Combined radial + axial: tapered roller or angular contact.
  • Light, fast, no misalignment: deep-groove ball.
  • Tight space, radial only: needle.
  • Shaft wobble / misalignment: self-aligning ball or spherical roller.
  • Cleanable / food / medical: sealed stainless.

Load life formula

L10 (hours)
= (10⁶ / 60N) · (C / P)^p
C
Dynamic load rating (N)
P
Equivalent applied load
p
3 (ball), 10/3 (roller)
N
RPM

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