Collection: High-Precision Flanged Ball Bearings

A precision flange ball bearing consists of a flanged outer ring, inner ring, steel balls, cage, and seals

flanged ball bearings-CXE Bearing

Outer Ring with Flange: This is the most distinctive feature.

Body: Like standard bearings, the interior contains a raceway for the rolling elements.

Flange (Rib): An extended "brim" structure on one side of the outer ring.

Function: Beyond supporting loads, its primary role is axial positioning. It ensures that once the bearing is installed into a housing or hole, it will not slide through due to vibration or axial thrust.

Inner Ring:

Structure: A ring mounted directly onto the rotating shaft with a precision-ground raceway on its outer surface.

Function: It serves as the primary interface with the rotating shaft, acting as the core receiver of rotational power.

Rolling Elements (Balls):

Structure: High-precision spheres situated between the inner and outer raceways.

Function: They convert "sliding friction" into "rolling friction," allowing for high-speed rotation with minimal heat generation. In miniature bearings, ball sphericity errors are typically controlled within the micron level.

Cage (Retainer):

Structure: A frame-like structure (resembling a small fence) that separates the balls.

Function: It prevents ball-to-ball friction, ensures uniform load distribution, and guides the balls along the correct orbital path.

Seals or Shields (Optional):

ZZ (Metal Shields): Two silver steel plates snapped into the outer ring; they do not touch the inner ring.

2RS (Rubber Seals): Colored synthetic rubber seals that contact the inner ring for a physical seal.

Open: No shields or seals, leaving the internals exposed.


Classification by Sealed Flanged Ball Bearings

Open Type

flanged ball bearings-open type from CXE Bearing

The most basic state where the rolling elements and cage are completely exposed. It offers the lowest friction but no protection against contaminants.

Shielded (ZZ)-Shielded Flanged Ball Bearings

flanged ball bearings-ZZ type from CXE bearing

Designation: "Z" refers to a single shield; "ZZ" refers to shields on both sides.

Material: Usually made of cold-rolled steel or stainless steel.

Pros: Non-contact design means minimal starting torque and rotational resistance.

Cons: Because there is a tiny gap between the shield and the inner ring, moisture and fine dust can penetrate the bearing.

Sealed (2RS)-Sealed Flanged Ball Bearings

flanged ball bearings-2rs type  from cxe bearing

Designation: Represents contact synthetic rubber seals on both sides.

Pros: The rubber lip presses against the inner ring, creating a physical barrier that offers the highest level of protection against water, steam, fine dust, and corrosive liquids. It also prevents grease leakage.

Cons: * Higher Friction: The contact seal "rubs" the inner ring, leading to higher torque.

Speed Limits: Friction generates heat, often reducing the limit speed by 30% or more compared to ZZ types.

Temperature Sensitivity: Standard rubber ages above 100 °C - 120 °C . For extreme heat, Viton (FKM) seals are recommended.


Classification by Material

Material Characteristics & Advantages
Bearing Steel (GCR15) The industry standard. High hardness, excellent wear resistance, and cost-effective. Best for high-load, general-purpose applications.
Stainless Steel

Usually made of AISI 440C (hard) or 304/316 (corrosion-resistant), these flange ball bearings are ideal for food processing, medical environments, or high-humidity settings

stainless steel flanged ball bearings fom CXE
Ceramic Made of Zirconia (ZrO₂) or Silicon Nitride (Si₃N₄), ceramic ball bearings with flange are non-magnetic, non-conductive, and withstand extreme speeds and temperatures
ceramic  flanged ball bearings from CXE
Plastic Made of materials like POM or PEEK, a plastic flanged radial ball bearing is lightweight, self-lubricating, and highly resistant to chemical corrosion, though limited in load capacity
PEEK flanged ball bearings from CXE


 Classification by Size

Miniature Flanged Ball Bearings: Featuring bore diameters from 1mm to 12mm, these are often designated as the MF Series (e.g., MF52, MF84) detailed in the flanged miniature ball bearing size chart from cxe bearing

flanged miniature ball bearings from CXE

Metric Flanged Ball Bearings: Dimensions and tolerances follow ISO standards (in millimeters). Common series include:

F68x Series: Extra-thin (e.g., F682, F688).

F69x Series: Thin (e.g., F693, F695).

F60x Series: Standard (e.g., F608).

Imperial (Inch) Flanged Bearings: Dimensions follow ANSI/ABMA standards (in inches). They typically use the "FR" prefix (e.g., FR188ZZ, FR4ZZ).


Technical Standards

The technical standards for a ball bearing flange encompass a strict system of dimensional tolerances, rotational precision, and material integrity, ensuring perfect axial positioning in compact spaces.

Dimensions and Tolerances

Boundary Dimensions: Regulated by ISO 15, GB/T 273.3, and JIS B 1512.

Precision Grades: Two main systems are used globally:

ISO/GB: P0, P6, P5, P4, P2 (Descending order of tolerance).

ABMA (USA): ABEC-1, ABEC-3, ABEC-5, ABEC-7, ABEC-9.

Radial Internal Clearance

The gap between the balls and the raceway, affecting temperature and vibration.

C2: Small clearance (for high precision/rigidity).

C0 (CN): Standard clearance (default for most uses).

C3 / C4: Large clearance (for high-heat environments to allow for thermal expansion).

Vibration and Noise

Z-Level (Acceleration): Z1 through Z4. Higher numbers indicate lower vibration.

V-Level (Velocity): V1 through V4. Measures the smoothness of operation.


Application Scenarios

The versatility of the flanged deep groove ball bearing makes it the go-to solution for compact designs. By integrating a mounting flange directly onto the outer ring, it simplifies installation and ensures perfect axial positioning across various high-precision industries

Micro-Motors & Stepper Motors: The flange allows the bearing to sit flush against the motor end-cap, eliminating the need for snap rings. (e.g., drone motors, cooling fans).

Office Automation: Used in printers and photocopiers to mount drive shafts onto thin sheet-metal frames easily.

Medical & Dental Equipment: High-speed ceramic flanged bearings are used in dental drills (handpieces) where speeds reach hundreds of thousands of RPM.

Consumer Electronics: Essential for HDD spindle motors and small handheld fans where space is at a premium.

Transmission & Pulley Systems: In 3D printers and belt drives, the flange acts as a "limit stopper," preventing the bearing from being pushed out of the housing by lateral belt tension.

RC Models & Hobbies: Used in RC cars and helicopters for wheel hubs and rotor shafts, enabling "plug-and-play" installation and easy maintenance