![]() The more the force, the stiffer the spring. As more force is added, more coils start to touch making the spring stiffer. When the spring is at rest all it's coils are available and it takes very little force for the spring to compress. Each coil is spaced differently so as the spring compresses and releases, it's characteristics constantly change. Giving you the 'perfect world' is what HYPERPRO is all about. The result is that you have one set of handling characteristics before the shorter coils touch and then you have another, completely different, level of response after they touch. This 'second-step' spring will be much stiffer than the whole spring (the more coils, the easier it is to compress the spring). You then have a spring comprised of only the longer coils. At a certain point, the shorter spaced coils touch, effectively eliminating them from the spring. ![]() As the spring compresses, the coils move closer. ![]() Spring-2 stepIn a two-step linear spring (or one-step progressive), about half the coils have shorter spacing. For example, if you have a spring that has ten coils spaced a centimeter apart, and you push down one centimeter on the spring, the entire spring compresses one centimeter and each coil will then be 0.9 centimeter apart. In a normal spring, the coils are evenly spaced and compress at the same rate.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |