JEGS Performance Products 25054 - JEGS Main Bearings

Traditional bearing construction is based upon a three layer configuration composed of a steel backing, a copper-lead layer and a very thin overlay of babbitt material only 0.0005" - 0.0008" thick. JEGS Cam Bearings use just two layers, a high strength steel backing plus a bonded layer of aluminum silicon material 0.015" thick. Aluminum silicon material is an alloy of tin, silicon and copper in an aluminum matrix. Because it is an alloy, it maintains its properties throughout its entire depth, delivering consistent and reliable performance. Both JEGS Performance and High Performance Cam Bearings are made from the same material. The High Performance Cam Bearings are micro-fine machined and have chamfered oil holes.
Features and Benefits:
Conformability
Temperature Resistance
High Load Capacity
Control of Wall Tolerance
All bearings are sold in sets.
Particle Embedability
More than half of engine bearing failures are caused by metallic particles which scratch crank journals and tear or weaken thin babbitt overlays such as in the tri-metal bearing.
Since JEGS aluminum silicon bearing layer is much thicker than the babbitt overlay (0.015" vs. 0.0008"), it provides eighteen (18) times more embedability than a tri-metal bearing to catch and hold particles so they don't scratch the bearing journals. This is especially true for particles over 0.0004" in diameter which cause most of the damage.
The much thicker layer of aluminum silicon bearing material (0.015" vs. 0.0008") allows the bearing to conform to problems such as metal to metal contact when there is mis-alignment present. Greater conformability means fewer bearing failures.
The aluminum silicon material's melting/fatigue point is over 450° F, 100° more than that of the thin babbitt overlay in a tri-metal bearing (400° F). This means added protection against localized overheating due to mis-alignment, detonation, overloading, loss of coolant, etc.
Alecular bearings successfully withstand the stresses of high performance engines. All JEGS Bearings are made from the same metallurgical alloy, so the regular bearing user gets the advantage of the alloy developed and used in race engines.
Bearing -to- journal clearances can be affected by several variables, all of which the engine builder must try to control. JEGS has removed concerns about inconsistent shell to shell bearing wall thickness by the use of statistical control methods to keep wall thickness to very limited variation. Other manufacturers produce bearings whose wall thickness at the crown can vary by up to + 0.00025". JEGS engine bearings have no more than + 0.00010" variation of the desired thickness.
