Shaft Repair Sleeves

Application: Pumps, Compressors, Conveyors, Motors, Gearboxes, Industrial Worn Shafts

Certification: ISO 9001:2015

ISO Certificate No.: 04324Q31759R1S

Issued Date: 2021-08-17

MOQ: 200 pieces

Lead Time: 7–14 business days after order confirmation, depending on order quantity and specifications.

Customization: Made to Order

Product overview

Shaft repair sleeves are engineered to be slipped over worn or grooved shaft surfaces to recreate the correct diameter, surface finish and sealing counterface without disassembling or re-machining the shaft. Typical sleeves are ultra-thin stainless steel or corrosion-resistant alloys, precision ground and finished to provide a new running surface for radial shaft seals and bearings.

Key features

  • Ultra-thin wall: standard wall thickness around 0.28 mm (0.011″) for many precision stocked sleeves, minimizing build-up while restoring diameter.

  • Precision surface finish: ground and lapped to typical finishes 10–20 µin (0.25–0.5 µm) for reliable sealing performance.

  • Stainless steel construction: AISI 304 / 316 stainless variants common for corrosion resistance and wear life.

  • Quick install: push-on or assembly-tool mounting; many kits include an installation sleeve/flange for safe, controlled fitting.

  • Stock & custom sizes: wide stock ranges for metric and imperial shafts; custom lengths, flanges and keyed options available.

Materials & selection guidance

Common sleeve materials

  • Stainless steel (AISI 304 / 316): corrosion resistance, dimensional stability and common for pump and rotary seal applications.

  • Nickel alloys / plated steel: used for specialized corrosion or wear environments where stainless steel is insufficient.

  • Bronze / brass sleeves (bush type): available where combined bearing and repair function is required—less common for thin repair sleeves.

When to choose a repair sleeve

  • Shaft has local wear grooves or seal grooves caused by seal lip wear and replacement of the seal alone will not stop leakage.

  • Replacement or re-machining of the shaft is cost-prohibitive or would require major disassembly.

  • You need a fast field repair or planned maintenance alternative that restores a seal-ready finish and correct running diameter.

Typical operating & dimensional parameters

Parameter Value / guidance
Standard wall thickness 0.28 mm (0.011″) common for precision stainless repair sleeves.
Surface finish after installation 10–20 µin (0.25–0.5 µm) recommended for seal counterfaces.
Common ID / shaft sizes stocked Metric and imperial ranges — many suppliers stock ID ≈ 3–200 mm (0.125″–7.9″); extended/custom sizes available.
Typical sleeve length (h) Common widths 6–50 mm for standard sleeves; pump-type sleeves and flanged versions up to several hundred mm for longer run surfaces.
Recommended shaft prep Clean, remove burrs; for best fit use undamaged reference diameter measurement and press-fit using the supplied installation sleeve/mandrel.

Common sizes & stock examples

  • Metric sample stock IDs: 12.00 mm, 13.89 mm, 15.00 mm, 16.00 mm, 20.00 mm, 25.40 mm, 31.75 mm, 40.00 mm, 50.80 mm, 63.50 mm.

  • Imperial sample stock: 0.622″ up to 7.005″ stock ranges for common pump and OEM replacement sleeves.

  • Form factors: full thin-wall jackets (slip-fit), flanged sleeves (with assembly flange), split sleeves and keyed OD/ID options for positive drive.

Advantages

  • Cost savings: usually far less expensive and faster than replacing or re-machining the shaft.

  • Minimal downtime: installation often performed in situ with simple pressing tools — ideal for pumps, gearboxes and rotating equipment.

  • Restores seal life: delivers a new, seal-ready counterface to stop leakage and prevent re-grooving of replacement seals.

  • Corrosion resistance: stainless options resist corrosion in wet or aggressive environments, extending service life.

Shaft repair sleeve vs other repair methods

Characteristic Shaft repair sleeve Hard chrome plating Shaft replacement / re-machining
Speed of repair Very fast — minutes to hours, field install. Moderate — requires specialist plating shop, longer lead time. Slow — full disassembly, machining or supply lead times.
Cost Low — economical for single items or fleets. Medium–high — plating and post-machining costs. High — new shaft or major shop work.
Required equipment Press or installation mandrel (often supplied). Plating bath, finishing tools. Full machine shop capability.
Resulting surface Precision ground, seal-ready finish. Can achieve excellent surface but needs post-finishing. OEM surface integrity restored.

Shaft repair sleeve vs Hydraulic guide ring

  • Function: Shaft repair sleeves restore a worn shaft counterface for seals/bearings; guide rings (including hydraulic guide rings) center pistons/rods and control radial loads inside cylinders. These two components serve different roles and are not interchangeable.

  • Service environment: Repair sleeves are typically used on rotating shafts and pump shafts; hydraulic guide rings operate inside cylinders where compressive load capacity and wear properties differ. Choose the correct component by function—repair sleeve for sealing counterface restoration, guide ring for piston guidance.

  • Material & geometry: Guide rings are often polymeric (PTFE, POM, phenolic) sized and grooved for axial guidance; repair sleeves are thin metal jackets machined for tight ID/OD control and surface finish. (Do not substitute.)

Installation & maintenance notes

  • Measure first: determine undamaged reference diameter in an undamaged shaft area to select correct sleeve nominal ID.

  • Shaft prep: clean shaft, remove loose corrosion and burrs; avoid heavy grinding that changes reference diameter.

  • Use installation tool: press the sleeve using the supplied assembly sleeve/mandrel or controlled hydraulic press to avoid distortion; remove assembly flange per instructions.

  • Final inspection: verify sleeve runout, seal seating surface finish and axial position; replace radial seals as required.

  • Service life checks: monitor for unusual wear or fretting—replace sleeve if surface is damaged or leaking recurs.

Downloads (buyer resources)

FAQ

Q — What sleeve thickness should I choose?
A — For precision repair sleeves the common standard wall is ≈0.28 mm (0.011″); thicker jackets or flanged sleeves exist for special applications. Provide the undamaged reference diameter and desired final running surface when requesting a quote.

Q — How do I measure the shaft to select a sleeve?
A — Measure the diameter at an undamaged section of the shaft with a calibrated micrometer. Use that nominal shaft dimension to pick the sleeve part whose nominal shaft Ø range contains that measured value (installation instruction included in each kit).

Q — Can sleeves be installed without removing the pump or machine?
A — Many sleeves are designed for in-place installation using the supplied assembly flange/mandrel; however, access and machine type determine feasibility. Provide photos or model information for a field-fit assessment.

Q — Do you provide custom or production quantities?
A — Yes — we supply single repair sleeves for maintenance as well as larger OEM production batches with part numbering, optional flanges and keyed features.

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