You did everything right. You installed the new shaft. You aligned it. You even gave it a pep talk.
But now it’s vibrating like a caffeinated jackhammer, your bearings are screaming for mercy, and your production manager just used the words “catastrophic failure” in a meeting.
It’s not you. It’s the shaft.
Let’s break down the five most common shaft issues we see here at General Machine — and what we can do to fix or prevent them:
What it is: Repeated contact with bearings, seals, or couplings slowly chews away the material.
What it causes: Undersized journals, sloppy fits, and the slow death of your machine.
What we do: Weld build-up and precision turn-down back to OEM spec, often using spray welding or sleeving if needed. Think of it as shaft Botox — smooth, youthful, and tight where it counts.
What it is: Lifting with a forklift, improper storage, or too many years of hard labor can warp a shaft.
What it causes: Vibration, premature bearing failure, and rotating shame.
What we do: For small deflections, we can often straighten with press jigs and controlled heat. Otherwise, we machine a new shaft from stock — fast and accurate.
Fun fact: We once fixed a 9-foot shaft that arrived looking like a boomerang. It’s now back in service — and turning true.
What it is: The keyway gets mangled from overload, misfit keys, or not enough Loctite and love.
What it causes: Coupling slop, misalignment, and mechanical heartbreak.
What we do: Weld and remachine, cut new keyways, broach replacements — or, in extreme cases, modify the shaft design to distribute stress better. Shaft therapy, if you will.
What it is: Scoring, galling, or rough finishes cause friction, heat, and wear.
What it causes: Seal failure, oil leaks, and “why is everything coated in hydraulic fluid?”
What we do: Regrind or turn to proper RMS spec, often using finer tooling or polishing if needed. We know how to make thingssmooth.
What it is: OEM shaft made from unobtainium? No material certs? No idea what you’re even holding?
What it causes: Analysis paralysis and very expensive guesses.
What we do: Material testing, reverse engineering, and good ol’ experience. Our machinists have seen it all — and if it spins, we’ve probably fixed it.
With OEM lead times hovering around 6–8 months and replacement costs sky-high, repairing your shaft can:
• Save 40–70% over the cost of replacement
• Get you back up in weeks, not quarters
• Let you improve the design while you’re at it
• Extend lifespan with upgrades (e.g., better materials or coatings)
At General Machine, we’ve built our shaft repair process to be:
• Fast (typically 2–4 week turnaround)
• Flexible (manual & CNC options for complex profiles)
• Massive (we can handle up to 160” between centers)
• Fair (upfront quoting, clear timelines, and no surprises)
And most importantly? We like shaft work. We really do. It’s the kind of job that rewards creativity, precision, and a little bit of grease under the nails.
"I love the smell of fresh 4140 in the morning."
— Our lathe operator, probably
If you’ve got worn shafts, broken shafts, mystery shafts, or just that one shaft you’ve been avoiding because you don’t want to deal with it — send it our way. We’ll get you turning again.
And if you’re just here for the shaft jokes? That’s okay too. We’ve got plenty more where that came from.
Ready to fix that shaft?
Reach out today — before your downtime becomes a drama.
Call us. Email us. Or stop by and bring donuts. We’re here to help.
©2025 General Machine Inc.