Spherical bearing

Spherical plain bearing
Spherical plain bearing, steel
Spherical roller bearing, with rolling elements at the contact surface

A spherical bearing is a bearing that permits rotation about a central point in two orthogonal directions (usually within a specified angular limit based on the bearing geometry). Typically these bearings support a rotating shaft in the bore of the inner ring that must move not only rotationally, but also at an angle. It can either be a plain bearing or roller bearing.

Self-aligning spherical bearings were first used by James Nasmyth around 1840 to support line shaft bearings in mills and machine shops.[1] For long shafts it was impossible to accurately align bearings, even if the shaft was perfectly straight. Nasmyth used brass bearing shells between hemispherical brass cups to allow the bearings to self-align.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Rolt, Nasmyth was invoked but never defined (see the help page).