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C3 vs Normal (CN) Bearing Clearance — What's the Difference?

C3 means the bearing has more internal clearance than standard. "Normal" clearance — often written CN, or left off the designation entirely — is the default; C3 is one step looser. This guide explains what internal clearance is, why it matters, and when to choose C3 over normal.

What is Internal Clearance?

Internal clearance is the small gap inside a bearing — the amount the inner ring can move relative to the outer ring before the rolling elements take up the slack. It is measured before the bearing is mounted. The reason it matters is that the clearance you start with is not the clearance you run with: two things in service close that gap up.

The clearance class is chosen so that after fitting and warming up, the bearing is left with the right amount of running clearance — not so much that it runs noisily, and not so little that it preloads itself and overheats.

The Clearance Classes

Class Relative to Normal
C2 Less than normal
CN (Normal) Standard — often unmarked
C3 Greater than normal
C4 Greater than C3
C5 Greater than C4

When to Choose C3

Pick C3 when something in the application is going to eat up the clearance:

If the bearing will run warm or sit on a tight shaft, C3 gives it room to breathe. This is the single most common reason engineers reach for C3 instead of normal.

When Normal (CN) is the Right Choice

For general-purpose machinery at moderate temperatures, with standard fits, normal clearance is correct — and choosing C3 unnecessarily can leave too much running clearance, which shows up as noise and less precise running. Normal is the default for a reason; only move to C3 when the application calls for it.

When to go Beyond C3

C4 and C5 are for more extreme cases — high operating temperatures or very heavy interference fits — where even C3 would be closed up too far in service.

How to Tell What You Have, and What to Order

The clearance is shown as a suffix on the bearing designation — for example 6205 C3. If there is no clearance suffix, it is normal clearance. When ordering a replacement, match the clearance of the original unless you have a reason to change it.

Can I Replace a Normal-Clearance Bearing with C3?

Often yes — and on electric motors a CN-to-C3 swap is frequently fine or even preferable, because of the heat and fit reasons above. But it is not automatic: on a cool-running, lightly-fitted application, going to C3 can leave too much clearance and make the bearing noisier or less accurate. If in doubt, match the original, or check the manufacturer's recommendation for the fit and temperature.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does C3 mean on a bearing?

C3 is an internal-clearance class meaning the bearing has more internal clearance than the normal (CN) standard.

Is C3 better than normal clearance?

Neither is "better" — they suit different conditions. C3 is right for warm-running or tightly-fitted bearings (such as electric motors); normal is right for general-purpose use at moderate temperatures.

Can I use C3 instead of CN?

Frequently yes, especially in motors, but not always. On cool, lightly-fitted applications C3 may leave too much clearance. Match the original unless the heat or fit gives a reason to change.


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