Anguar contact ball bearing number-1(1

Angular Contact Ball Bearing Numbers: A Complete Guide to Designations, Suffixes & Selection

Angular contact ball bearings handle both radial and axial loads at high speeds—think CNC spindles, gearboxes, pumps, and electric motors. But the cryptic numbers on the bearing (like 7205BEP or 7211-B-MP-P5-UA) aren’t random. They encode everything from size and contact angle to cage material and precision class.

Before the blog, we want to introduce us as a professional angular contact ball bearings supplier in China for 15 years.

Mastering the numbering system saves time, money, and downtime. Here’s how to decode them step by step.

Anguar contact ball bearing number
Angular contact ball bearing number-2

Above: Cross-section views of single-row angular contact ball bearings. The contact angle (α) between the ball and raceway determines axial load capacity—higher angles (e.g., 40°) handle more thrust.

1. Why Angular Contact Bearings (and Their Numbers) Matter

Unlike deep-groove ball bearings (which handle mostly radial loads), angular contact designs have offset raceways. This creates a contact angle (usually 15°–40°) that lets them support combined loads and tilting moments.

They are almost always used in pairs (back-to-back DB, face-to-face DF, or tandem DT) for rigidity and bidirectional axial loads.

The designation system follows ISO standards but with manufacturer-specific suffixes. Major brands (SKF, NSK, FAG, NTN) use similar basic codes but vary in suffix meanings—always check the catalog!

2. Breaking Down the Basic Designation (The Numbers)

Most single-row angular contact ball bearings follow this format:

7 [Dimension Series] [Bore Code]

7 = Single-row angular contact ball bearing
Dimension Series (next digit):
0 = 70 series (extra light)
2 = 72 series (light)
3 = 73 series (medium)
Bore Code (last two digits): Bore diameter in mm.

00 = 10 mm
01 = 12 mm
02 = 15 mm
03 = 17 mm
04 and up = code × 5 mm (e.g., 05 = 25 mm, 06 = 30 mm)

Example: 7205

7 = angular contact
2 = light series
05 = 25 mm bore

Angular contact ball bearing number-3
Angular contact ball bearing number-4

Above: Official NSK and Schaeffler (FAG) designation charts. The “7” type code and bore multiplier (×5) are universal across brands.

3. Contact Angle Suffixes (The Most Important Letter)

The contact angle directly affects load capacity and speed:

CodeContact AngleTypical UseAxial Load Capacity
C15°High speed, low axialLow
A / A5 / E25–30°Balanced loadsMedium
B40°High axial / thrustHigh

Examples across brands:

NSK 7205A = 30°
NTN / SKF / FAG 7205B = 40°
FAG 7211B = 40°

Higher angles = more thrust capacity but slightly lower speed limits.

Angular contact ball bearing number-5

Above: NSK diagram showing how contact angle codes (C, A5, A, B) change radial vs. axial capacity and limiting speeds.

4. Common Suffixes (Cage, Precision, Preload & Arrangement)

After the basic number come letters/numbers that customize the bearing:

Cage

M / MP / L1 = Machined brass (high speed/temperature)
P / T / T1 = Polyamide / phenolic (lightweight, quiet)
J = Pressed steel

Precision / Tolerance

P5 / P4 / P2 = ISO classes (higher = tighter tolerances for spindles)
Equivalent to ABEC 5/7/9

Preload / Clearance

GA / L / EL = Light preload (universal mount)
C3 / C4 = Greater internal clearance

Arrangement (for pairs)

DB = Back-to-back (highest rigidity)
DF = Face-to-face
DT = Tandem
UA / U = Universal (can be mounted any way)

Other

E / XL = Optimized internal design or X-life (longer life)
2RS / ZZ = Seals or shields

Full real-world example (SKF): 7211 BECBM

72 = light series, 11 = 55 mm bore
B = 40° contact angle
E = optimized raceways
CB=Bearing for universal matching. Two bearings arranged back-to-back or face-to-face have Normal axial internal clearance.
M = Machined brass cage, ball centred; different designs are identified by a number following the M, e.g. M2

Angular contact ball bearing number-6

Above: Real SKF angular contact bearings (e.g., 7312 BECBM style) with visible cages and markings.

5. Quick Selection Tips Using the Number

Match bore to your shaft (e.g., 7206 = 30 mm).
Choose contact angle by load: 40° for heavy thrust (pumps), 15–25° for high-speed spindles.
Pairs are standard—look for DB/DF/DT or UA suffix.
Precision: P4/P5 for machine tools; normal for general industry.
Always verify speed, load ratings, and grease in the manufacturer’s catalog (SKF, NSK, NTN, FAG).

6. Common Applications

CNC machine tool spindles
Automotive transmissions & wheel hubs
Centrifugal pumps & compressors
Robotics and high-speed gearboxes
Electric motors and generators

Conclusion: Read the Number, Avoid the Headache

The next time you see 7205 BEP or 7211-B-XL-MP-P5-UA, you’ll know exactly what you’re getting—bore size, contact angle, precision, and mounting style in one glance.

If you still have confusion on this, please feel free to contact us, we can help you in this.

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