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Spring Balances, Gages

Springs act as flexible joints that cushion impacts and control motion. They have several objectives including cushioning shocks, controlling motion through various mechanisms, measuring forces, and storing energy. Springs are designed based on required strength, yield properties, cost constraints, and environmental factors. Key design considerations include material selection, wire dimensions, number of coils, end treatment, and factors of safety for static and fatigue loads. Both compression and extension springs must be analyzed for stresses, deflection, fatigue life, and end stresses to ensure reliable performance.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
64 views44 pages

Spring Balances, Gages

Springs act as flexible joints that cushion impacts and control motion. They have several objectives including cushioning shocks, controlling motion through various mechanisms, measuring forces, and storing energy. Springs are designed based on required strength, yield properties, cost constraints, and environmental factors. Key design considerations include material selection, wire dimensions, number of coils, end treatment, and factors of safety for static and fatigue loads. Both compression and extension springs must be analyzed for stresses, deflection, fatigue life, and end stresses to ensure reliable performance.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Definition of spring: Spring act as a flexible joint in between two parts or bodies

Objectives of Spring

1. Cushioning , absorbing , or controlling of energy due to shock and


vibration.

• Car springs or railway buffers


• To control energy, springs-supports and vibration dampers.

2. Control of motion
• Maintaining contact between two elements (cam and its follower)
In a cam and a follower arrangement - a spring maintains contact between the
two elements.
It primarily controls the motion.
• Creation of the necessary pressure in a friction device (a brake or a clutch)
• Restoration of a machine part to its normal position when the applied force is
withdrawn (a governor or valve)
• A governor system uses a spring controlled valve to regulate flow of fluid through
the turbine, thereby controlling the turbine speed.

3. Measuring forces - Spring balances, gages


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4. Storing of energy- In clocks or starters
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07/05/2020 Courtesy: A textbook on machine design, R.S.Khurmi 12
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Compression Springs
1) Type of ends?

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Compression Springs

Ground Section
Free Length
Mean Diameter

Outside Dia.
Inside Dia.
12 ½ Coils
Pitch Space Between Coils
Size of Material

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Types of Springs

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Types of spring cont.

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Types of springs cont.

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Types of springs cont.

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Spring Design
F  ky
kF/y

1 1 1 1
  
k series k1 k 2 k3
k parallel  k1  k 2  k3

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Factors in spring design
 High strength
 High yield
 Modulus may be low for energy storage
 Cost
 Environmental factors
 Temperature resistance (e.g. valve springs)
 Corrosion resistance

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Common materials for springs

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Influence of diameter on
ultimate stress

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Design of helical compression
springs  Length nomenclature
 Free
 Assembled
 Solid or shut height
 Working deflection

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Stresses in Helical Spring

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Stresses in Helical springs cont.
At the inside of the spring Substituting for

Gives

4<C<12
Defining the spring index

Therefore the stress is


Equation(1)

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Effect of curvature on Stress
 Equation (1) is based on the wire being
straight
 However the curvature increases the stress
on the inside of the wire
 For static stress the effect of curvature can
be neglected
 For fatigue the effect of curvature is important

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Effect of curvature cont.

Wahl factor

Bergstrasser
factor

The results of the two equations differ by less than 1%.


Bergstrasser factor is preferred due to simplicity

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Deflection
 The external work done on an elastic member
in deforming it is transformed into strain, or
potential, energy. If the member is deformed a
distance y, and if the force-deflection
relationship is linear, this energy is equal to
the product of the average force and the
deflection, or

 This equation is general in the sense that the


force F can also mean torque, or moment,
provided, that consistent units are used for k.
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Deflection cont..

 By substituting appropriate expressions for k,


strain-energy formulas for various simple
loadings may be obtained. For tension and
compression and for torsion,

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Deflection of a helical spring
 Using Castigliano’s theorem, strain energy is
equal to

 Substituting

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Deflection cont.
 Using the spring index

 Spring scale is

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Spring design – end treatment
 End details affect active coils
 Plain ends
 Squared ends
 Squared
 Ground

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Number of active coils

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Materials for springs
 Yield strength for static loading
 Depends on set
 Before set removed use Wahl factor
 After set removed no stress concentration used

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Properties for fatigue
 Fatigue Strength
 Torsion is relevant loading- could use von Mises
stress
 Materials testing specific to helical compression
springs is available, however
 Correct for temp., reliability, environment

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Properties - endurance
 Endurance Strength (steels) unlimited cycles
 For high ultimate strengths, endurance limits max
out at 45 kpsi (unpeened) and 67.5 kpsi (peened)
 Small wires have high ultimate strength
 Tests have been done specific to spring wire
 Temperature may require compensation
 Corrosion
 Reliability

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Designing springs
Requirements Design Choices
 Functionality  Index C
 Stiffness  Material
 Lengths  Wire and coil
 Diameter diameter
 Forces
 Number of turns
 Reliable operation  End treatment and
 Static factor of safety
constraint
 Fatigue factor of safety
 Buckling and surge
 Set and shot peen
 Manufacturability Constraints (other)
• Bend radius
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Helical extension spring
 Similar in most ways to
compression springs
 Usually wound to be closed
coil at zero force
 Thus a preload is required
to stretch any, i.e. y=k(F-Fi )
 Spring hook is a source of
failure in bending and
torsion
 No set is used
 One coil not considered
active

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End stresses
Bending stress:
16 DF 4 F
 A  Kb  2
d 3
d
4C12  C1  1 2 R1
Kb  ; C1 
4C1 (C1  1) d

Torsional stress:
8 DF
 B  K w2
d 3
4C2  1 2 R2
K w2  ; C2 
4C2  4 d
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Design for fatigue
 Data available for springs with loading from
zero to some compresion value
 Application often has preload… how to use?
 First construct (or find) S-N curve
 Next construct Mod-Goodman chart
 Apply load line for given preload and design
stress
 Find factor of safety to failure point

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A word about torsional springs
 The wire in a torsional spring is primarily in
bending
 Spring constant is rotary M=k
 Loading should act to wind up coil
 Design process resembles compression
springs

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Torsional

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