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COMPRESSION SPRINGS
Custom Compression Springs · Engineering Review · Drawing Fast-Track
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End Type Configurations
Compression springs are manufactured with several standard end configurations. Each affects solid height, load distribution, and how the spring seats in an assembly.
Closed & Ground
- End coils closed and ground flat
- Provides a uniform bearing surface
- Minimizes deflection variation under load
Closed & Squared
- End coils closed, not ground
- Economical for general-purpose applications
- Acceptable squareness for most industrial uses
Open Ends
- End coils not closed — all coils active
- Requires piloting or guided application
- Higher force capacity within given solid height
Double Closed Ends
- Two additional inactive coils at each end
- Enhanced stability for large diameter-to-wire ratios
- Resists tipping in non-parallel load conditions
Coiling Methods – Material Considerations
Compression springs are manufactured using either cold or hot coiling. The choice is not merely a matter of equipment capacity—it fundamentally affects material properties and long-term performance.
Cold Coiling
- Formed at ambient temperature from fully heat-treated wire
- No decarburization or scaling; surface finish preserved as-drawn
- Residual tensile stress introduced on inner coil surface during forming
- Stress relieving (≈200–300°C) reduces but does not eliminate these stresses
- Suitable when wire diameter ≤ 16 mm and spring index (C/D) ≥ 5
Hot Coiling
- Wire heated above austenitizing temperature (≈800–1000°C) prior to forming [citation:5][citation:9]
- Decarburization and scaling possible; may require post-processing
- No cold-work-induced residual stress; residual stress from quenching only
- Requires quenching + tempering to achieve final mechanical properties
- Required for wire diameter > 16 mm or low spring index
Each method carries inherent trade-offs between surface integrity, residual stress state, and dimensional capability.We evaluate your drawing against these process boundaries—not to reject, but to align method with expectation.
Spring Geometry
Compression springs are not limited to cylindrical constant-pitch designs.
The following configurations can be produced from your drawing:
- Cylindrical — constant diameter, constant pitch
- Conical — decreasing diameter, low solid height
- Variable pitch — progressive rate, increasing resistance under compression
- Nested / multi-spring — multiple concentric springs, compact high load
- Square / rectangular wire — when specified on your drawing
- Custom shapes — barrel, hourglass, multi-stage, non-cylindrical, etc.
We manufacture to the geometry specified in your drawing — no need to redesign for manufacturability.
After Coiling — The Difference Between a Spring and a Reliable Spring
Compression springs are coiled in seconds. What happens in the minutes and hours after that determines whether they still meet your specifications after 1,000, 100,000, or 10 million cycles.
Stress Relieving
- Removes residual stress from colding forming
- Prevents dimensional change and premature failure
Presetting-optional
- Eliminates initial settling
- Load and free length remain stable from first cycle to millionth
Shot Peening-optional
- Includes compressive residual stress
- Blocks crack growth — fatigue life increases 3–5×
These steps are not automatically applied to every spring. They are engineering decisions — selected based on your load profile, cycle requirements, and operating environment. We recommend during engineering review, not before.
Wire Cross‑Section
- Round Wire
- Square / Rectangular
- Flat / Ribbon
- Shaped / Profile (oval, half‑round)
Common Materials
- Music Wire
- Oil Tempered Wire — incl. alloy grades
- Carbon Steel
- Stainless Steel
- Inconel / Hastelloy
- Phosphor Bronze / Beryllium Copper
Finishes
- Electroplating(Zinc, nickel and ect)
- Electroless Plating(NIckel)
- Black Oxide
- Phosphating
- Passivation (for stainless steel)
- Chromating
- Powder Coating
- Vacuum Coating (PVD, IP plating)
- Polishing / Buffing
- Oil Coating
- Zinc-Nickel Alloy Plating
- Geomet
- Dacromet
- Anodizing (for non-ferrous)
- Teflon (PTFE)
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