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Bearing Noises and What They Mean

Noise is one of the three classic warning signs that a bearing is in trouble — alongside heat and vibration. A healthy bearing runs with a steady, low hum; anything that stands out from that is worth investigating. The useful thing is that the kind of noise usually points to a specific cause.

Match the Sound to the Cause

What You Hear Most Likely Cause
Continuous high-pitched squeal or whistle Inadequate or wrong lubricant, or a clearance that is too tight
Rumbling, growling, rough or gritty rotation Contamination, or wear/corrosion of the raceway
Regular clicking or knocking, once per revolution A dent or spall on a raceway or rolling element
Intermittent crackle or popping Hard particles passing through (contamination)
Hum or whir that climbs with speed Often normal; if loud, a cage or lubrication issue

What Each Noise is Telling You

A Continuous Squeal or Whistle

High-pitched, steady noise usually means the lubricant film has broken down — the wrong grease, too little of it, or the wrong viscosity for the speed — so surfaces are sliding rather than rolling cleanly. It can also mean the bearing is fitted too tight, with the running clearance squeezed out. Check the lubrication first; if the grease is fine, suspect the fit and clearance.

A Rumble or Growl

A rough, low, grinding sound points to the raceways no longer being smooth — typically abrasive wear from contamination, or corrosion that has pitted the surface. The bearing is on its way out; plan a replacement and find how dirt or moisture is getting in.

A Regular Click or Knock

A distinct knock or click that repeats once per revolution is the signature of a single defect — a dent or a spalled patch on a raceway or a rolling element. The element strikes the same spot each turn. Causes include fatigue spalling or brinell dents from overload or mishandling. This noise will only get worse.

An Intermittent Crackle

Irregular crackling or popping usually means hard particles are passing through the bearing — contamination that has not yet caused permanent damage but soon will. Clean grease and intact seals are the cure.

How to Listen Properly

A bearing that is getting both louder and hotter is close to failure. Don't wait — investigate.

Preventing Bearing Noise

Most noise traces back to the same few causes, so prevention is straightforward: keep the bearing and lubricant clean, use the right grease in the right amount, mount it without denting the raceways (press only on the correct ring), and choose the right clearance for the operating temperature.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is my bearing squealing?

A continuous squeal usually means a lubrication problem — the wrong grease, too little, or the wrong viscosity — or a fit that is too tight. Check the lubrication first.

What does a knocking or clicking bearing mean?

A knock that repeats once per revolution points to a single defect — a dent or spall on a raceway or rolling element. It will get worse, so plan to replace the bearing.

Can a noisy bearing be fixed without replacing it?

If the cause is lubrication or surface contamination caught early, cleaning and re-lubricating may help. Once a raceway is dented, spalled or worn, the bearing should be replaced.


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