Spring rate is:k = (G x Dw^4) / (8 x Dm^3 x Na)
where:
k is spring rate in N/mm
G is shear modulus, or modulus of rigidity = 79340 MPa for good carbon and alloy steel springs
Dw is diameter of wire in mm
Dm is mean diameter of coil (OD - Dw) or (ID + Dw) in mm
Na is number of active coils
To convert N/mm to lbs/in, multiply by 5.711
Number of active coils are those coils not in direct contact with the spring seat or an adjacent coil, enabling them to flex and contribute to spring deflection. In other words, the coils that are free to compress under load.
Usually Na is total coils - 2, however when the closed coil at the ends is also tapered, and the spring has sagged, or the precision of the Winding is poor, the number of Inactive Closed coils at either end can be greater, and they must be excluded from the count of the Number of Active Coils.
So look at the spring for where the gap starts and count from there to where the gap closes at the other end.
As you can see the rate increases to the 4th power of wire diameter, so measure it accurately and don't include paint thickness.
Rate is inversely proportional to the 3rd power of mean coil diameter and inversely proportional to number of active coils. I.e. rate reduces if coil diameter, or number of active coils increase.
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