A bearing surface is a mechanical engineering term that refers to the area of contact between two objects. It usually is used in reference to bolted joints and bearings, but can be applied to a wide variety of engineering applications.
On a screw the bearing area loosely refers to the underside of the head.[1] Strictly speaking, the bearing area refers to the area of the screw head that directly bears on the part being fastened.[2]
For a cylindrical bearing it is the projected area perpendicular to the applied force.[3]
On a spring the bearing area refers to the amount of area on the top or bottom surface of the spring in contact with the constraining part.[4]
The ways of machine tools, such as dovetail slides, box ways, prismatic ways, and other types of machine slide are also bearing surfaces.
| This article about a mechanical engineering topic is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)