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How to Read a Bearing Number (Designation Explained)

A bearing number is not random — it encodes the bearing's type, its size and its features. Once you can read it, you can tell at a glance what a bearing is and what shaft it fits, without reaching for a catalogue. Most metric bearings follow the same pattern: an optional prefix, a basic number (type + size series + bore), and one or more suffixes.

Take 6205-2RS C3 as the example we'll decode:

Step 1 — The Type (First Character)

The first digit or letters tell you the bearing type. The most common codes:

Code Type
6 Single-row deep-groove ball (the most common)
7 Single-row angular-contact ball
1 Self-aligning ball
2 Spherical roller
3 Tapered roller
5 Thrust ball
N, NU, NJ… Cylindrical roller

So the 6 in 6205 means a deep-groove ball bearing.

Step 2 — The Size (Dimension) Series

The next digit gives the dimension series — roughly, how heavy-duty the bearing is for a given bore. For the same shaft size, a higher series means a larger outside diameter and more load capacity. So a 6205 is lighter than a 6305, which is lighter than a 6405 — all with the same 25 mm bore. The 2 in 6205 is dimension series 2 (a medium, general-purpose section).

Step 3 — The Bore (The Last Two Digits)

This is the part most people actually want — the shaft size. For bore codes 04 and above, the rule is simple:

Bore (mm) = bore code × 5 (for codes 04 to 96)

So 05 means 05 × 5 = 25 mm. The only exceptions are the four smallest standard codes, which have fixed values:

Code 00 01 02 03 04 and up
Bore 10 mm 12 mm 15 mm 17 mm code × 5

Bores below 10 mm or above 480 mm follow special rules (often the bore appears directly, sometimes after a "/").

Step 4 — The Suffixes (Seals, Clearance, More)

Anything after the basic number describes features. The common ones:

Putting it Together

6205-2RS C3 = deep-groove ball bearing · dimension series 2 · 25 mm bore · two contact seals · clearance greater than normal.

More Worked Examples

Number Meaning
6000 Deep-groove ball, light series 0, bore 10 mm.
6204 Deep-groove ball, series 2, bore 04 × 5 = 20 mm.
6305 Deep-groove ball, heavier series 3, bore 25 mm.
7206 B Angular-contact ball, series 2, bore 30 mm, 40° contact angle.
NU 309 Cylindrical roller, series 3, bore 09 × 5 = 45 mm.
22210 Spherical roller, dimension series 22, bore 10 × 5 = 50 mm.
30205 Tapered roller (3-series), bore 25 mm.

A Note on Brands

The basic number (type, series, bore) is common across manufacturers, so a 6205 is a 6205 everywhere. The suffixes, however, differ between SKF, FAG, NSK, NTN and others — the same feature can be coded with different letters. When cross-referencing, match the function (seals, clearance, precision, cage), not just the letters.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find a bearing's bore size from its number?

Take the last two digits (the bore code) and multiply by 5 for codes 04 and above — so 6205 has a 25 mm bore. Codes 00, 01, 02, 03 mean 10, 12, 15 and 17 mm.

What does 6205 mean?

A single-row deep-groove ball bearing (6), dimension series 2, with a 25 mm bore (05 × 5).

Are bearing numbers the same across brands?

The basic number is, so the size and type match across makers. The suffix letters for seals, clearance and cages vary by manufacturer, so check those against the maker's catalogue.


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