I remember pouring Babbitt bearings back in the 90s for some Gardner Denver Cycloblower labyrinth seals. The labyrinth and oil seal surface were both machined onto the outer diameter of a thick steel collar that slipped on over the shaft. The Babbitt seal was poured into a heavy steel ring that pressed into the end cover of the blower housing.
You burned out the old babbit, cleaned the steel rings with acid flux, tinned the surfaces with some 50/50 solder, put an aluminum metal plug inside the ring, and poured in the metal. The babbitt bars were stamped Linotype 038, so it was probably used for typesetting in earlier days. Once it cooled, the aluminum plug was pressed out on a hydraulic press and the final inner diameter was turned to size on our little Jet lathe. The steel rings were heated by a tiger torch beforehand, and rested on a 2" thick piece of steel round bar faced smooth in a lathe, about 12" in diameter that had also been heated by the tiger torch. The idea was not to chill the babbitt as it was poured in to ensure even coverage all throughout the collar. The babbit was heated in a metal ladle held over a small propane flame. All tools were made in house by the lead tech, who was a very good mechanic.
The blowers were used in soot collection at one of the local power plants. These blowers probably weighed about 700lbs and were very solidly built, pretty much like everything Gardner Denver makes. That didn't prevent a warranty trip out to the plant one day to figure out why one of our rebuilds had seized. When the techs onsite began to remove the piping, my boss said the pipes went "sproing" jumped a gap of about 4", and magically, the blower could be turned by hand.
I also discovered during a trip to a lumber mill that the teeth of the main saw were also held in place with babbit.