DCA4B How To Make Springs PDF
DCA4B How To Make Springs PDF
DCA4B How To Make Springs PDF
Second, before you start to work with spring wire, read the section on safety. When you have read that section, read it again. No kidding. And third, about this document: I've tried to write for the benefit of someone who has (or can gain access to) basic hand and power tools. The sections of the document are arranged in logical order presuming a minimal knowledge of the metalworking trades in general or of springmaking in particular, and crosslinked to provide a forward path that leads from this point through the entire manufacturing process. There's a glossary of spring terminology and an addendum, which should help you to define terms and find additional resources. Where possible, I've indicated where to find additional information in the main body
NEW STUFF
January, 2003!
of the text. Most of the current material relating to the subject is written for mechanical engineers, but there are some other writeups I've heard of, too see the addendum for links to these. In its first incarnation, this site was made in frames. In the second, I did away with the frames for the sake of design simplicity. My apologies to anyone who linked to 'frameset'. The other new addition is the site map, which will give you a bird's-eye view of the whole shebang. This is now the third incarnation and except for freshening the links from time to time, I consider it done. If you want to have it as a handy reference, feel free to download the zipped version. Lastly, the text itself is of very limited use without the graphics, and there is no 'text-only' version of this site. So if you've got your graphics turned off, turn 'em on, OK? Any comments or suggestions for improvement should be made to yours truly.
INTRODUCTION
This section will give you some basic information about springs, what they look like, what their parts are, and how they work. If you already know about springs and want to get right to it, be my guest. There are three basic types of springs:
Compression springs can be found in ballpoint pens, pogo sticks, and the valve assemblies of gasoline engines. When you put a load on the spring, making it shorter, it pushes back against the load and tries to get back to its original length. Extension springs are found in garage door assemblies, vise-grip pliers, and carburetors. They are attached at both ends, and when the things they are attached to move apart, the spring tries to bring them together again. Torsion springs can be found on clipboards, underneath swing-down tailgates, and, again, in car engines. The ends of torsion springs are attached to other things, and when those things rotate around the center of the spring, the spring tries to push them back to their original position. See the Glossary for detailed diagrams of these types of springs.
Terms of Use
Equipment
Tooling
Setup
Torsion springs
Wire length, first trial spring, torsion spring ends, extended hooks Wire length, first trial spring, loops, hooks, swivel hooks Wire length, first trial spring, grinding the ends, squareness, free length adjustments, setting solid, heat setting Tweaking dimensions, stress relief, passivation, plating
Finishing
Other types of springs Buckling columns, nested compression springs, conical compression springs, variablepitch springs, snap-rings, doubletorsion springs, wire forms, bedsprings, limited-travel extension springs, braided wire springs, heavy wire, light wire, square and flat wire, tubular stock, leaf springs, Belleville washers, clock springs Spring shops Glossary Organization, product costing and pricing, careers Definitions of spring-related words, detailed diagrams of the major types of springs and their parts
Resources
Sources of information, associations, spring shops, suppliers, and other related links About this site; about me; and how to download this site. This is an index page that provides access to new stuff added since January, 2003, and a chronicle of updates to the main body of the site.
Terms of Use
SPRING DESIGN
If you're trying to make a spring to replace a broken one, you don't need to know a whole lot about design. On the other hand, if you're making a prototype of a machine, for instance, and you don't know exactly what you want, then this page is for you. Here you'll learn some basic data about spring design, which is what you'll need to know to make exactly the spring you want.
G G G G
General Principles
There are three basic principles in spring design:
G G G
The heavier the wire, the stronger the spring. The smaller the coil, the stronger the spring. The more active coils, the less load you will have to apply in order to get it to move a certain distance.
Based on these general principles, you now know what to do to change the properties of a spring you already have. For instance, if you want to make automotive valve springs a little stronger than stock, you can a) go to a slightly heavier wire and keep the dimensions and coil count the same, b) decrease the diameter of the spring, keeping the wire size and coil count the same, or c) decrease the number of active coils, keeping the wire size and spring diameter the same. Naturally, you can also go to a stronger material to achieve the same result. Now, what if you're making a spring from scratch, with nothing to go on in the way of a sample? You can engineer your own design (see the next section of this page for the math), coil a spring, and then test it. If it's what you want, fine. If it's, let's say, a skosh too strong, then you can a) go to a lighter wire, b) open up the coil diameter, or c) increase the number of active coils to get a slightly weaker spring. Or, if you want to make things really simple, go to the Addendum,
Mathematics
Naturally, spring design software is available you can find out where to get it in the Addendum. For the purists (or those who don't want to pay for a program), here's a very short summary of the mathematics of spring design. These equations, by the way, are taken from The New American Machinist's Handbook, published by McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.in 1955. I don't pretend to understand them.
There's a lot more in the way of engineering that goes into spring design: these are only the basic equations. If you're interested, you can contact someone who makes spring design software or (gasp!) find it in the library under Dewey classification number 621.824. You can also contact the Spring Manufacturers' Institute: they make a handy-dandy spring calculator, suitable for simple design work, that anyone can learn to use. They also have spring design software, training classes, and a bunch more stuff. Dave sez, Check it out.
Design Limitations
Depending on what kind of spring you want to design, and depending on where it will be used, your design will be limited:
A spring under load is stressed. If you put too much stress on a spring, its shape will deform and it will not return to its original dimensions. The material from which the spring is made will have an effect on the strength of the spring: it will also have an effect on how much stress the spring will withstand. The section on spring materials will tell you more about this. When you heat spring wire (which you always do), it may change its dimensions. Again, the section on materials will tell you more about this.
If the spring will set solid (compress all the way, so that all the coils touch each other) at the limit of its travel, the diameter of the wire times the number of coils cannot be greater than the space allowed, unless you want the spring itself to act as a mechanical stop to the motion. Springs that operate in a high-temperature environment (like for instance inside an engine) will need to be made slightly longer to compensate for the fact that the heat may have an effect on the length of the spring. The section on finishing will tell you more about this. As a compression spring assumes a load and shortens, the diameter of the active coils will increase. This is only a problem when the spring has to work in a confined space.
There should be some mechanical limit on how far the spring will extend, or the spring will lose its shape and not return to its initial condition with all coils closed. Extension springs operating in a high-temperature environment may have to be coiled extra-tight, as the heat will tend to weaken the spring. The section on extension springs will tell you more about this.
When a torsion springs assumes a load, the diameter of the coil body will decrease. If the spring has something inside the coil, it will act as a mechanical stop to the action of the spring.
Buying Design
If you want to have a mechanical engineer design your spring, your best bet is to call a spring shop. You can find spring shops in the phone book. If your phone book doesn't list any, go to the library: they should have phone books for major cities where spring factories are -- try Detroit or Los Angeles if there are none in your area. A spring shop will generally do the design work for you for a small charge. They will also try to get you to let them make the spring for you, which you may or may not want. The section on spring shops will tell you more about how their business operates. The addendum will give you links to spring shops, suppliers, people who make spring design software, and a whole slew of other stuff.
Forward to Materials
Terms of Use
CREDITS
Old springmakers never die ... they just lose their initial. (Don Coache)
I hope you've found the information here useful. I know I've forgotten to mention a whole slew of stuff that'll probably occur to me at 3 in the morning. But enough is enough, and if I don't quit now, this site will never get launched at all! Before I do that though, some credits are due:
G
This site was done with the aid of Arachnophilia, with technical graphics prepared in Windows Paint and converted with LViewPlus. Navigation graphics were done in Paint Shop Pro, which is widely regarded as the poor man's PhotoShop. It was optimized for Netscape 3.0+. The graphics and drawings are mine, mistakes and all. The site was completely redone in February of 2006 by Wendy Hart. She is amazing and I'm still learning lessons from her code. Since this site was first published on the Web in 1997, I've had literally hundreds of emails from people who were seeking information on how to make springs or just happened to breeze by accidentally. To those who asked questions, I hope I've been able to help. Others offered suggestions, shared technical knowledge, pointed out errors, and sent links. To each of those people and there were many my heartfelt thanks. My springmaking career began in grinding and progressed through secondary to short order work. I worked in San Francisco- and Los Angeles-area shops from 1974 to 1979, and I still remember a thing or two
about the trade. Some of my teachers were Don a little pain never hurt anybody Nyswonger and Charlie you're gonna have problems if you do it that way Gamble.
Feel free to download this site in zip format - it's about 350KB uncompressed, graphics and all. Or, if you prefer, you can have the printable PDF version, courtesy of Harry Seibert. (You'll need Adobe's Acrobat reader to view this document. If you don't have Acrobat, you can download it here for free.) And don't forget to drop me a line if you've got the notion :-)
Terms of Use
Spring Factories
(Manufacturers of coil springs unless otherwise noted.)
G
Australia
H H H H H H H H
Bernhart Springs Carrolls Spring Dobinsons Spring & Suspension Industrial Engineers & Spring Makers Jubilee Springs Kings Spring Works Lovells (automotive) Thomas Marsh & Co
Belgium
H
FLR
Brazil
H
Canada
H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H
Associated Spring (ON) Bohne Spring Industries (ON) Chamberlain Spring (BC) hot wound springs Commercial Spring & Tool Co (ON) Custom Spring (ON) Dendoff Springs Limited (BC) DeSantis Industrial Spring Stampings (ON) Dominion Spring Industries (ON) Hasco / Springco Industries Inc (ON) Liberty Spring (QB) Maverick Spring Makers Muliform Spring (BC) Newcomb Spring of Canada (ON) Paris Spring (ON) Peterson Spring (ON) Premier Spring & Mfg Ltd (ON) REM Mfg Ltd (SA) United Springs Ltd (ON) Wallbank Mfg Co Inc (ON) Western Spring & Wire Ltd (ON)
China
H
China Metal Spring Factory (Hong Kong and mainland) Hang Cheong Metal Factory (Hong Kong)
Costa Rica
H
Great Britain
H H H
Airedale Springs Ltd. Ashfield Springs Ltd. Bywell Springs and Pressings Ltd
H H H H H H H H H H
Capital Springs Design & Technical Engineering Standards Ltd (gas springs) Doig Springs Limited Harris Springs Ltd. Holt Springs Ltd W M Hughes Ltd Irvine Spring Co Ltd Leeming & Peel Ltd Southern Springs & Pressings Springmasters Sterling Springs (also stocks material) TruSprings
India
H
S K Spring Co
Israel
H H
Malaysia
H
Chung Rong
Mexico
H H
Associated Spring - Mexico Peterson Spring - Resortes y Productos Metalicos S.A. Resortes Monticello de Mexico
Pakistan
H
South Africa
H H
O.A.L. Spring Manufacturers Pty Ltd (Added 316-2004) Springmaster Webroy (Pty) Ltd
Spain
H
Muelles Crom
United States
H
Nationwide Directory maintained by Thomas Co. you must register to use. Alabama I Alabama Spring Mfg Arizona I Phoenix Spring Company Arkansas I Spring South Inc California I Aard Spring & Stamping I Acxess Spring (Southern California) online ordering I Advanced Spring Technology (AST) (Southern California) I American Precision Spring I Argo Spring Mfg I Bazz-Houston Co I Betts Spring Company I Century Spring Corporation (Southern California) catalog store I Connor Mfg Services I Diversified Spring Tech Inc (Southern California) I Eibach Springs Inc I Flex Metal Components I Foremost Spring Co Inc I FTR Metal Products Inc. I Kato Spring
Mid-West Spring Mfg I Newcomb Spring of California I O'Hara Metal Products Co I Peninsula Spring (N California) I Peridot Corp (N California) I Precision Coil Spring (S California) I Scandic Springs, Inc (N California) I Schellinger Spring Inc I Spring Industries (Southern California) I Titan Spring Inc I Tru-Form Tool & Mfg I Walker Corp I Weichhart Stamping Co Colorado I Colorado Coiling I Newcomb Spring of Colorado Connecticut I Acme-Monaco Corporation I Arrow Manufacturing I Associated Spring I Atlantic Precision Spring Inc I Banner Spring I Bristol Spring Manufacturing Co. I Century Spring Mfg Co I Colonial / Han-Dee Spring LLC I Connecticut Spring & Stamping I Dayon Mfg,. Inc. I D R Templeman Co I Dymco I Fourslide Spring Products, Inc. I Fourslide Spring Products Inc I Gemco Mfg I Imperial Spring I Lee Spring Co I Newcomb Spring Corp. I Peck Spring I Plymouth Spring Co., Inc. I Rowley Spring & Stamping Corp. I Southington Tool & Mfg. Corp.
I
TAK Enterprises Incorporated I Tollman Spring, Inc. I Triple A Spring, Ltd. Florida I Gilco Spring of Florida I Industrial Spring I Southern Spring & Stamping I Wolf Wire Forms Inc Georgia I Landrum Spring Service I Newcomb Spring of Atlanta I Peterson Spring - Georgia Illinois I Alco Spring Industries, Inc. (railroad springs) I All-Rite Spring I Dudek & Bock Spring Mfg I Form-All Spring & Stamping I High Precision Components I International Spring Company I Keats Mfg I Lewis Spring & Mfg I Master Spring and Wireform I PJ Spring Co. I Mastercoil Springs I Mid-West Spring Mfg I O&G Wire Forms Co I O'Hare Springs Co, Inc. I Patrick Manufacturing, Inc. I Perfection Spring & Stamping Corp. I Peterson Spring - Greenville I Precision Products Group I Rich Industries I Rockford Spring Co. I Solar Spring Corporation I Spring Specialists Corp. I Stanley Spring and Stamping Corp. I Sterling Spring Corporation I Wesco Spring Co
I
Wireformers, Inc. I York Spring Co. I Zaco Mfg Indiana I Firestone Industrial Products Company air suspension I Kokomo Spring Co Inc I Mid-West Spring Mfg I Monticello Spring I Myers Spring offers online design! I Pepka Spring offers online design! I Winamac Coil Spring, Inc. Iowa I Iowa Springs Mfg Kentucky I W B Jones Spring Co I Hasco/Springco Industries USA Inc. Maryland I Kirk-Habicht Spring Company (Baltimore) I Maryland Precision Spring Massachusetts I Peterson Spring I Spring Manufacturing Corp. Michigan I Apex Spring & Stamping I Associated Spring I Automatic Spring Products I Bohnert L.L.C. I Eaton Springs automotive suspension I Gilco Inc. I GR Spring & Stamping I Hasco Spring Industries, Inc. I HyTech Spring and Machine I Lake Michigan Wire Technologies, Inc. I M & S Spring Company, Inc. I Michigan Spring & Stamping I Mid-West Spring Manufacturing I Peterson Spring
I
Quality Spring/Togo, Inc. I Schnorr Corporation (Belleville washers) I Spring Dynamics, Inc. I Spring Engineering & Manufacturing I STC Technologies I Wolverine Coil Spring Minnesota I Industrial Spring Company I Mid-West Spring Manufacturing I Spring Force Inc. I Original Standard Spring leaf springs I Vadnais Technologies Corp. I Western Spring Missouri I Industrial Spring (Kansas City) I Industrial Spring (St. Louis) I Spirolox Springs I Wermke Spring Mfg New Jersey I Atlantic Spring I Murphy & Read Spring Mfg I Omega Shielding Products New York I Associated Spring I Lee Spring Company I Midstate Spring, Inc. North Carolina I Baumann Springs USA I HS Wire Technology (bed springs) I Newcomb Spring of Carolina I North Carolina Coil Inc. I Southern Precision Spring Co. Ohio I Bloomingburg Spring & Wire Form I Capital Spring I Elyria Spring & Specialty I Hasco Spring Industries, Inc. I Marik Spring
I
Michigan Spring & Stamping - Elyria I North Coast Spring & Stamping I Peterson Spring I Reliable Spring & Wire Forms Co I Sanborn Wire Products, Inc. I Service Spring Corporation garage door springs I Spring Team, Inc. I Twist, Inc. I Yost Superior Co. Oklahoma I Ebsco Spring Company I Gardner Spring, Inc Oregon I Anderson Quality Spring I Benz Spring Co. I Connor Manufacturing Services I Curran Coil Spring, Inc. I Northwest Fourslide, Inc. I Northwest Spring & Mfg Pennsylvania I A.V. Weber Co., Inc. I Ace Wire & Spring I Ametek, Hunter Spring Products I Associated Spring I Chestnut Group Inc. I Diamond Wire Spring I General Wire Spring I James Spring & Wire I John Evans Sons, Inc. I General Wire Spring Company I Mercer Spring & Wire I Navarro Spring Co., Inc. I Sun Spring Manufacturing I Vulcan Spring & Mfg Inc. South Carolina I Diamond Wire Spring I Duer/Carolina Coil, Inc. I Springmasters
I
Tennessee I General Spring, Inc I Hasco Spring Industries of Tennessee, Inc. I Newcomb Spring of Tennessee I Southern Spring & Mfg, Co., Inc. Texas I Associated Spring I Coiling Technologies I Connor Manufacturing Services I Diamond Wire Spring I Draco Spring Manufacturing I Engineered Spring Products I Gifford Spring I Keats Southwest I Leeco Spring International I Michigan Spring & Stamping I Newcomb Spring of Texas I SEI Metalforms I SEI MetalTek I Southern Spring Manufacturing, Inc. I Spring Engineers of Houston I Suhm Spring Works, Inc. Utah I Spring Works Utah Inc. Washington I Renton Coil Spring Co. Wisconsin I Aaron Spring I Associated Spring I Automated Wire Products Inc (hydraulic power industry) I Exacto Spring I Fox Valley Spring Company glossary I ITW Shakeproof/Milwaukee I Oshkosh Coil Spring, Inc I R & L Spring Co. I Wisconsin Coil Spring
Taiwan
H
H H
Accord Kev Ind. Co., Ltd. (springs and equipment) Chien Sheng Spring Industrial Co., Ltd. (clock & power springs ) Ta Ming Springs Co Ltd Ty Power Spring (clock & power springs)
Machinery (note that most machinery manufacturers sell and distribute worldwide)
H H H H H H H H H H
H H H H H H
Accord Kev Ind. Co., Ltd. (Taiwan) A.I. Technology (Japan) American International Machinery, Inc (US) Automated Industrial Motion (US) Asahi-Seiki Mfg (Japan) BHS-Torin (US) Forming Systems Inc G+M Dorn - grinders (US) Horizon Machinery (US) coilers & grinders Howar Equipment (Canada) wireworking machinery (added 3-16-2004) Max Springs Machinery Inc (US) Moyer Mfg Co Inc grinders Nichols International lathe coilers (US) Okuno Machine Co (Japan) Oriimec Corp. of America Phoenix Machinery (US - under construction 4 Nov 01) SECEM coiling & wire straightening machinery (Italy) Systemes Sarotech Inc (Canada) - torsion spring software
Taihei Mfg., Ltd. (Japan) Toyo Seiko shot peening media (Japan) Unidex Group (US - select spring machinery & equipment in the left-hand panel) U S Baird Corp slide forming machinery
Wire (note that most wire manufacturers sell and distribute worldwide)
H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H
A D Mackay Inc - unusual alloys, etc. (US) Admiral Steel (IL) Alloy Wire Intl (UK) Amstek Metal (US) Bekaert (Belgium & elsewhere) Elgiloy Gibbs Wire & Steel (US / Canada) Haldex Garphyttan Wire (US) Industrial Alloys, Inc. (US) The Interwire Group (US) Kiswire Lapham-Hickey Steel (US) Leggett & Platt Wire Group Little Falls Alloys (NJ / CA / AZ / UK) Loos & Co., Inc. Mapes Wire (US) Maryland Specialty Wire, Inc. Miraglia (Italy) North American Wire Products Corp (OH) Precision Steel Warehouse R&F Alloy Wires (US) Regal Steel Co. Sandvik Seneca Wire & Mfg. ShapedWire Company (US) Sivaco (US) Stainless Wires Sterling Springs (also makes springs) Sugita Wire Sumiden Wire Products Corp. (US)
Techalloy Co., Inc. (US) Theis Precision Steel Corp. (US) United Wire Co., Inc. Ulbrich Stainless (US / UK) Tool King, Inc. (US - flat stock) Wire Source, LLC WRCA Wire (Missouri - wire rope)
H H
H H
H H H H H H
H H H H
Accra-Wire Controls (US) - wire handling equipment Advance Car Mover (US) - hand looper & coiler Anchor Abrasives grinding supplies Apex Industrial Machinery Company (IL) dereelers, ovens, test equipment Carlson Company, Inc. (US) hand coilers web site gone with the wind :-( Creative Coatings, Inc. (US) Dynaphysics spring design software, including online application Electronics Inc. - shot peening equipment Furnace Fixers, Inc. - ovens General Inspection (US - QC machinery) J N Machinery - heat treating equipment Larson Systems Inc. (US - testing equipment) Lesmo America (US) - wire straighteners & other equipment Link Engineering Company test equipment Lion Precision (gauges) Marquardt Engineering Inc. US - coiler parts) Moyer Mfg. Co., Inc. Grinding & mfg equipment Nichols International Machinery Systems Co. (US - testing equipment) North American Spring Tool Co. (US - tools & tooling) Norwalk Innovation Inc. - wire handling equipment (US)
H H
Precision Quincy heat treating ovens Pyromaitre, Inc. (Canada - stress relief ovens) Spectral Systems Inc (US - wire handling equipment) Stamping Specialty Co Inc stock oilers Varland Metal Service Inc.- electroplating (OH)
Associations
G G G
G G
Chicago Association of Spring Manufacturers Precision Metalforming Association Spring Manufacturers' Institute (US mainly - trade organization) WireNet (Wire Association Intl) Wire Technology International wire industry journal
Springmakers
Randy Kepner is a springmaker in Pennsylvania
Miscellaneous
The Library will typically contain engineering and design reference texts at Dewey classification #621.824. There are also a couple of articles in magazines to check out:
G
Helical Springs by Kozo Hiraoka, in Home Shop Machinist, May/June and July/August issues, 1987. (Thanks to Don Peterson for telling me about this) NOTE: This article is avaiable on the Web here. Spring Winder by Glenn Wilson, in Machinist's Workshop, Feb/Mar 2001 issue (thanks, Glenn!) Springs & Pressings A Designer's Guide by
Matthew Drew, privately published by Southern Springs & Pressings. Ask nice and he may send you a copy. Bookstores are usually not so helpful unless they're technical in nature. The Thomas Catalog has a listing for springmakers Don't forget the Guild of Metalsmiths And here's a directory of manufacturers of wire forms! [added 9-15-2003] Saving the best for last, we have the metalworking newsgroup that provided me with the inspiration to put this site on the Web, as well as many comments as well as some good, lasting friendships.
If you know any other links that should be on this page, let me know.
GLOSSARY
These are many of the common words that have definitions in the springmaking field. The definitions are my own (caveat) and are admittedly not complete. This is not a dictionary -- it's just another tool you can use to do a better job.
G G
Active coil A coil of wire which contributes to the motive force of a spring. In extension and torsion springs, all the coils are active coils. In compression springs, only the coils which show daylight between them are active coils. Arbor A bar or pipe around which wire is wound to form a spring. Back gear A mechanism in a lathe that allows the chuck to turn very slowly. Beryllium copper (wire) An exotic material that can be made into springs. Bundle A roll or coil of wire as it is shipped from the manufacturer. Cast The curvature in wire that results from its being bundled into coils at the factory. Chrome Silicon (wire) An alloy of steel, stronger than Oil Tempered wire. Chrome Vanadium (wire) An alloy of steel, stronger than Oil Tempered wire. Closed and ground end Referring to the end of a compression spring where the wire forms one dead coil and is ground square. Closed end Referring to the end of a compression spring where the wire forms one dead coil and is not ground square. Coil 1) (noun) The wire of a spring going completely around once (see active coil, dead coil).
2) (noun) A bundle of wire as it is shipped from the factory. 3) (verb) To form (wire) into a spring. Compression Making smaller. Compression spring A spring which derives its usefulness because it pushes against a load which makes it smaller. Dead coil A coil of wire which does not contribute to the motive force of a spring. In extension and torsion springs, there are no dead coils. In compression springs, the coils at each end that lay against each other are dead coils: all the rest are active coils. Double torsion A form of torsion spring that has two coils; one left-handed and one right-handed, connected by a central tongue. Extension Making longer. Extension spring A spring which derives its usefulness because it pulls against a load which makes it longer. Free length The length of a spring with no load applied. Grinding stage A flat (usually) steel platform used to ensure that the ends of compression springs orient correctly to a grinding wheel. Heat treat(ing) 1) The process of tempering metal. 2) (colloquially) The process of stress relief. Lathe A machine which derives its usefulness by rotating stock against which tooling may be brought to bear. Springs are often wound on a lathe. Lead screw A mechanism in a lathe that allows the tool post to move from side to side at a precise rate. Mandrel An arbor. Music wire A high-carbon steel alloy used in making springs. Open end Referring to the end of a compression spring where the pitch of the spring extends all the way to the end of the wire, and does not form any dead coils. OT (Oil Tempered wire) A lower-carbon steel alloy used in making springs. Passivate (-ation) The process of removing chemical coatings from stainless steel by immersion in an acid bath.
Phosphor bronze (wire) An exotic alloy sometimes used in making springs. Pigtail A form taken by tie wire when used to secure a bundle of heavy spring wire. Pitch The distance, center to center, between two active coils of a compression spring. Spring [dia] A helically formed piece of (usually) wire which derives its usefulness because it tries to regain its original shape when subjected to a load. See Compression Spring, Extension Spring, Torsion Spring. Stainless Steel (wire) An alloy used in making springs that will not rust. The most common stainless steels are called 302 and 17-7. Stress Misalignment of the molecules in wire due to bending. Titanium A strong, lightweight metal sometimes used in making springs. Tool post The part of a lathe that allows tooling to be mounted and used on stock. Torsion Twisting. Torsion spring A spring which derives its usefulness by trying to return to its original shape when subjected to a load traveling around its axis. Variable pitch A form of compression spring that has more than one pitch. Wind To coil (a spring). Wire Metal, usually round and solid in section, used in making springs.
Compression Spring:
Extension Spring
Torsion Spring
Terms of Use
How spring shops are organized Costing and pricing Careers in springmaking
Spring Shops
In almost every major city you will find spring factories. Some specialize in certain kinds of springs, while others can make anything you can dream up. The major springmaking centers in the United States are the area around Detroit (which serves the automobile industry) and the area around Los Angeles. Most spring shops are divided into two parts: the office and the shop itself. Inside the shop, there are often four departments: Coiling This is the area where the automatic coiling machinery operates. Automatic coilers can handle wire from .010" to .500", and once they're set up, can pretty much run all day long. Added 3-16-2004: For a really great description of how automatic coiling machinery works, click here. Grinding This is the department where the ends of compression springs are ground. A lot of the work is done with automatic machines, which pass the springs between two grinding wheels that can be four feet across. The secondary department is where wire is bent by hand. This is where the ends of torsion springs are formed, where loops are put onto the ends of extension springs, and where wire forms are made.
Secondary
Short Order This is where small quantities of springs are made by hand. If a customer wants less than 50 of a spring, the job is given to the short order department, since they can generally make the springs faster and their work doesn't tie up the automatic coilers. Most of the information on this site would be used in the short order part of the shop. Depending on the size of the shop and what it's equipped to make, there can also be machinists to make tooling, a shipping and receiving department, a quality control department, and a hot shop, where larger sizes of wire are made into really big springs.
set the job up, times an hourly rate, plus run the job, times an hourly rate, plus do any secondary work, times an hourly rate, plus get any outside finishing work (like plating) done,
The hourly rates will vary from shop to shop. Generally, they'll figure an hour to set up an automatic machine, and they'll estimate the time it takes to do the coiling, grinding, looping, etc., based on what they know the machines and people can do. They'll have a minimum charge to cover their expenses, even for small orders. There are also catalog stores, which stock a variety of more-or-less common spring designs. Some have catalogs, and you can call them and place an order just like you would with any other retailer.
Careers in Springmaking
Someone applying for work in a spring shop will generally start out either in grinding (the dirtiest, most boring part of
the work) or in secondary. Experienced springmakers will tend to make a home for themselves either in coiling or in short order. Springmaking is a good field, especially if you're into machinery. But once you're working in a spring shop, it's hard to transfer from the shop into the front office. Also, if you've spent a few years in springmaking, it's next to impossible to find work in any other trade. Beats selling pencils on the corner tho ... :-)
Terms of Use
G G G
Round wire H Buckling columns H Nested compression springs H Conical springs H Variable-pitch springs H Snap-rings H Double torsion springs H Wire forms H Bedsprings H Limited-travel extension springs H Braided-wire springs Heavy wire Light wire Other materials H Square and flat wire H Tubular stock H Leaf springs H Belleville washers H Clock springs
I've also written up how to make clock and power springs. You can find that info here, which is where I list all the new stuff that's been added to the site beginning January, 2003.
something gets close to it. You can make buckling columns very easily with a drill: just follow the procedure for making fine-wire extension springs. Nested compression springs: Sometimes, you'll need a compression spring that's stronger than any single spring can be. In that case, you can make nested compression springs one spring inside the other that will be a lot stronger than a single spring. Some automobile valve spring assemblies are actually nested springs: so are the suspension springs on railroad cars. You can make nested compression springs easily: just remember two things: 1. Nested compression springs must be different-handed. If the outer spring is right-handed, then the inner spring must be left-handed, or vice-versa. 2. The outside diameter of the inside spring CANNOT be larger than the inside diameter of the outside spring. If it is, the springs will not nest. Conical springs: You may want to make a compression spring that's smaller at one end than the other. This is called a conical, or tapered, spring. You can make these just like any other compression spring: the only difference is the arbor, which must also be cone-shaped. The best way to make a cone-shaped arbor for light wire is to turn one out of wood. Get your arbor diameters for both ends by using the steps in the section on The Setup and turn your arbor like this: Use good, hard wood ash, for instance and remember: wood is a lot weaker than steel. Don't try to coil long springs on a wooden arbor, and don't try to make a conical spring with wire heavier than about .125". It can be done, but with heavier wire, the wire will start to cut a groove in the wood. More important, the arbor may snap, which would NOT be fun. The other thing to watch out for is that when you grind the ends of a conical spring, you have to hold the spring in your hands to get it ground square. Because the sides of the coil are sloped, using a grinding stage would not give you a square end. Variable-pitch springs: Sometimes you'll want a compression spring that starts out soft and after a certain load is placed on it, becomes stiffer. This is called a variable-pitch spring, and you can see springs like this in some motorcycle shock absorbers:
These are pretty tricky to make, but you can do it. Here's how:
1. Make your setup as you would for any other compression spring. 2. Find the right settings for your lead screw for each of the segments of the coil. 3. Start to wind the spring. When you've wound what you want at the first pitch, STOP THE LATHE and change the lead screw speed setting to the second position. 4. Continue winding at the second pitch until you've finished the spring. The key is to have some way to remember TWO coil counts: one for the first section, and one for the second. Once you can do this, then you can change where you switch from one lead-screw speed to another and come out with the exact spring that you want. Snap-rings: Snap rings are easy. Just coil an extension spring with the right diameter and cut off single rings, one at a time, with wire cutters. Double torsion springs: You recall how torsion springs can be either left-handed or right-handed? Well, sometimes you'll want to make a torsion spring that's both. Such springs are sometimes found on clipboards, and they might look like this: Making double torsion springs means making some pretty specialized tooling, and the best way to actually wind them is with a hand-winder. Here's how: 1. First, find the right size of arbor for making the coils. The arbor will have to be at least a few inches longer than the widest part of the coils. 2. Grind a flat spot on the arbor, narrower than the distance between the insides of the two coils. 3. Drill a hole through the arbor at the flat spot. At this point, your arbor should look like this:
4. Make a short pin that'll fit into the hole in your arbor. The pin should be an inch or so longer that the arbor is thick, and have a bend in one end. The other end should be slightly rounded, like this: 5. Now, get a piece of flat stock as thick as the inside gap between the two coils of the spring. Grind it like this:
6. Drill a hole in this piece (the tongue piece) so that when you put the arbor, tongue piece, and pin together, they look like this:
7. Make TWO wire guides, one for each side of the spring. Make sure that the pins on the wire guides come out one to the left and one to the right. Whew! You're about half done! 8. The next step is to prepare your wire: 1. The first step is to figure out how much wire you'll need to make a spring. Do this the same way you did for a single torsion spring, figuring out how much you'll need for ONE SIDE of the double torsion spring. Don't forget the fudge factor. When you're done, then just double your answer: that'll do for a start. 2. Take a length of wire and form a U in the center. (Your design may call for other bends in the center piece I call it a 'U' just for simplicity's sake.) This will be the tongue of your spring, so make sure you get the inside dimension of the bend the right size. You can form the U using any of the bending jigs we've discussed. 3. Save this setup. After you make your first spring all the way through, you'll use it again to make as many springs of this design as you need. 9. Now it's time to actually coil the springs. Chuck up your arbor in your hand winder. Leave enough room between the chuck and the flat spot to fit one side of the completed coil, the width of one wire guide, plus at least half an inch. Slide the left-hand wire guide onto the arbor. That's the one with the pin coming out the RIGHT side. Slide the tongue piece onto the flat spot on the arbor and put the pin through both to hold them together. Slide the right-hand wire guide onto the arbor. Hook your prepared wire onto the tongue piece and over the arbor. Hold it
tight against the tongue piece as you catch each free end of the wire with the wire guides. Your setup should look like this:
14. With your left hand, put a little tension on the arbor -- enough to be sure that your wire guides have both caught the wire securely. 15. Then start to wind, holding both wire guides with your right hand. Keep a little pressure toward the center of the spring from each side. Spring coils should start to form on either side of the tongue piece. You can let them 'push' your wire guides outwards as you continue.
16. Stop winding when you have a little more coils down on each side than the finished spring will need. Back the winder off until the spring hangs free on the arbor. 17. Now, take the spring off the arbor: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Slide the right-hand wire guide off the arbor. Use a finger to pull the tongue of the spring off the tongue piece. Pull the pin out of the tongue piece. Pull the tongue piece off the arbor. Slide the spring free.
Then, check your dimensions and change the number of coils you lay down until you've got the right number. Stress-relieve the coils and finish the ends like any other torsion spring. Note that
because the two coils are mirror-images of each other, you'll probably need to make two setups to do any bending on the legs of the spring -- one for the right-hand coil and one for the left-hand coil. Wire forms: Wire forms are any shape made out of wire not just a coil. There are a jillion different kinds of wire forms: here's a common one.
You can make wire forms easily with round-nose pliers, or with a bending jig. Bedsprings: These are basically hourglass-shaped compression springs in which the ends wrap around themselves. They're made on special automatic machinery I hope you don't need one bad enough to try making it yourself they can probably be made by hand, but it would not be easy. Limited-travel extension springs: Sometimes you'll want to make an extension spring that only extends so far and then stops. You'll see these sometimes on screen doors:
As you can see, they're basically compression springs with a little extra added hardware. Here's how to make them: 1. Make the compression springs and don't grind the ends. 2. For each spring, make two wire forms that look like this:
3. Stick one of the wire forms through the center of the spring coil until the wire form sticks out the other end. 4. Slide one of the legs of the other wire form through the center part of the first
one. 5. Flip the second wire form around so that the center part is aimed down the middle of the spring, and push it through. There you go! Braided wire springs: Howitzers and other military hardware use springs that have to handle sudden significant loads. Ordinary solid-wire springs would shatter under the stress of artillery recoil, so for these situations springs are made out of braided wire. I haven't seen any of these myself but I imagine that coiling such material would be similar to coiling solid wire. Very heavy wire: What's the heaviest wire that can be made into a spring? Well, coiling cold, the heaviest is about 5/8". Most spring shops won't coil 5/8" wire cold, though, because it's too dangerous. Springs made from larger material start as straight bars of steel with the ends tapered down. The bars are heated red-hot and then coiled on special machinery. I've seen 21/2" bars made into railroad suspension springs, and I've heard of 6" bars being made into compression springs that are used as shock absorbers for underground military command sites. If you need a spring made with wire thicker than .375", I'd recommend going to a spring shop and having them make your springs for you. With a big enough lathe and a thorough awareness of wire safety, you can coil up to .625", but frankly, most springmakers you talk to will think you're crazy. Very light wire: Common commercial coiling machines typically handle wire as fine as .010", but springs have been made with wire as fine as .002" using custom-made micro coilers. Winding extremely fine wire by hand is difficult because the wire tangles easily and cuts flesh even easier. Leave these to the pros, OK?
Tubular stock: You can also coil tubing into spring shapes for cooling coils and so forth. Tubular stock is very soft, though, compared with solid wire, so a couple of extra steps are needed:
G
All tooling parts which come in contact with the stock should be dished to accommodate the stock. That means the arbor should be made with a shallow groove: And the wire guide, ideally, should be a roller with a groove in it, gimballed to allow it to swing: To prevent the stock from collapsing during bending, fill it with fine sand before you start. Be sure the sand is packed tight the tighter the sand, the less the stock will deform.
Leaf springs: Leaf springs start out as bars of flat stock, which are then heated redhot and formed, either by machine or by hand. If you need leaf springs, best bet is to go to a spring shop that specializes in making them. Belleville washers: These are just like regular washers flat metal donuts except that the inside of the washer is higher than the outside. Belleville washers are mounted in a pack and with a bunch of them together, make a very strong spring. Belleville washers are made by a stamping process that's best done in a spring shop. Clock springs: Some springs are made from wide, flat stock and coiled up like the shell of a snail. These are called clock springs, and the material they're made from is called 'blue clock', because the color of the steel is blue. Springs like this are found inside clocks, retractor reels, and other machinery. Take apart an old thermostat and you'll see that the sensor element is basically a clock spring. You can make them on a lathe, but you'll need special tooling that's not easy to make. Your best bet, again, is to go to a spring shop and get them made for you.
Terms of Use
FINISHING
This section will tell you about a few of the finishing touches you can put on your springs. Some of these are necessary, while others may be called for by the design you have in mind.
G G G G
Tweaking
Sad to say, your spring may not be exactly what you want. Sometimes not all is lost though you should know, first, how to correct what's wrong and second, what you can do to tweak your springs into shape. First, how to correct what's wrong:
Increasing the
Will give you A weaker spring: it will take less force to deflect the spring a certain amount.
Number of coils
A weaker spring: it will take less force to deflect the spring a certain amount. A stronger spring: it will take more force to deflect the spring a certain amount.
(You'll note that this is the same data you read about in the section on spring design.) Sometimes you'll be able to tweak your springs into shape, especially when they're not too far off, and also especially before you've relieved the stress. Here are some techniques you can use: You can open up the diameter a notch or two by grabbing the ends of the wire in your hands and twisting the coil gently in the opposite direction. This works best on short springs with few coils. On longer springs with many coils, you can open the diameter up by simply dropping the spring onto a hard surface (like maybe the floor). Compression springs can be shortened by setting them solid or heat setting them (see the section on compression springs). You can lengthen a compression spring by driving a wedge in between each pair of coils. Be careful to use the same amount of force each time you do this, and also be sure you do it evenly all the way up and down the spring body. Note that when you do this, the diameter of the spring will also open up.
Necessary Steps
Stress relief Spring wire that gets bent has to have the bending stress relieved. Here are the stress relief guidelines for all common spring wire materials. Temperature (deg. F.) 400 (none) (just warm) 600 350 800 800 900 500 800 1375 1375 then 700 1250 1000 Time (hrs) (none) 1 5 1/3 1 16 16 1 4 4
Material Aluminum Basic Brass Beryllium copper Bronze Chrome Silicon Chrome Vanadium Elgiloy Hard drawn Inconel Inocnel 718 Inconel X #1 temper Inconel X spring temper K Monel
Movement (none) (none) (none) close slightly (none) close close open (none) (none) (none) (none)
(none) (none)
Maraging flat stock Maraging wire Monel Music wire Ni-span C Oil Tempered Premier Rene' 41 Stainless steel (302) Stainless steel (17-4 or 17-7) Titanium Passivating
(none)
950
4+
1 1 3 16 1
open open
900 800
1 10
Working with stainless steel creates free iron contamination on the surface that can later rust and create problems with the part and its working environment. The process of removing this free iron is called passivation: here's how you do it. BEFORE YOU START, find a safe spot to do this. You should do it outdoors, and away from anyplace where animals or other people can get into it. 1. Put your springs into a stainless steel basket, which you made on the tooling page. 2. Fill your passivating tank with acid. The tank itself can be anything large enough that doesn't leak and is
made out of stainless steel. An old sink, fitted with a stainless steel plug in the drain hole, works great. Muriatic acid the same kind they use for swimming pools is a good acid to use*. Pour the acid into the tank, being careful not to get ANY on your body or your clothes. 3. Lower the basket with the springs into the tank and let it sit there for an hour. 4. After an hour, lift the basket out of the tank and wash the springs with plain water. If you want to save the acid for later use, put it back into its original container and WASH OUT THE TANK so that no animals or people can get into it accidentally. Don't passivate anything but stainless, by the way: the acid will eat non-stainless steel and ruin the springs. * I have had correspondence from a metallurgist who advises me that muriatic acid is incorrect. He advises nitric acid and has asked me to include a reference to the ASM Metals Handbook on Cleaning and Finishing, for those of you who are interested. You may want to consult a metallurgist or materials engineer on this point there may be another acid that's more workable, or a recommended dilution of muriatic acid that I'm not aware of.
Optional Steps
Depending on where you want your springs to go, you may want them to look shiny. If you do, you can have them plated after you're finished making them. Plating will not change their dimensions. You can have springs plated with chrome, silver, gold, or any other metal. Springs that are used to make electrical connections are usually plated with silver or gold. If you're not in the plating business yourself, your best bet is to get your springs plated commercially, rather than try to do it yourself. Also depending on the use of the springs you make, you may want to have them painted or dipped in rubber (like if you want to hang something from an extension spring and not let the spring scratch whatever it is that's hanging from it).
I personally think that small-wire springs can be beautiful, and although I've never done it myself, there's no reason why someone couldn't make jewelry using them as a starting point. Earrings, for instance. If you want to try this out, go right ahead.
Forward to other types of springs that you can make. Forward to how spring shops operate.
Terms of Use
The coiling setup for making a clock spring is pretty simple too. Chuck up your arbor and put a piece of square stock in your tool holder, parallel with the arbor. You can define a channel through which your stock will pass by using a couple of C clamps. It's best to wind the spring with the stock traveling under the wire guide and over the arbor so you can see what's going on. There's no left hand and right hand to these springs, so how the stock actually feeds into the setup makes no difference.
If you're working with heavy stock or if you're working with ANY stock and have to make a lot of coils, make one final modification to your arbor. Bolt a flat plate onto the end of it so that the stock cannot slip off the end while you're coiling and bring you grief. Okay. Let's give it a try. Take your first sample and secure the inside end to the arbor. Let the tail end of the stock run under the wire guide and make sure you have your keeper ring handy. Go ahead and coil up the stock (coiling speed DEAD SLOW) and stop when you have coiled the right number of coils plus ten percent OR when you get close to the end of your stock. When you're done coiling, slip the keeper ring over the spring (you may have to remove the safety plate first) and run the lathe backwards to release the tension. The spring will expand the keeper ring slightly: when it's loose on the arbor, go ahead and slide it off:
You can check it now ideally in its final assembly and figure out how much to change the length of the stock piece you start with. Once you've figured that out, go ahead and trim the second sample to that length. Then, form up the outside end of this second sample by bending, drilling, etc., so that it can be mounted in its final housing securely. Now go ahead and coil up this second sample and see if it works. Ideally it will. If not, you can always cut a fresh piece of stock and try again. Don't forget to make enough keeper rings! Terms of Use
COMPRESSION SPRINGS
This page will tell you how to make compression springs. Making compression springs is a lot more fun than making either extension or torsion springs, but it's also a lot more complicated.
Before we start, let's have a word about equipment. Compression springs have pitch that's the distance between the open coils in the spring and to make a spring with pitch means that you have to be able to control how fast your wire guide travels from left to right as the arbor turns around. With a lathe, it's easy. You just engage the lead screw and away you go. But with a drill or a hand winder, it's more difficult. Not impossible, just more difficult. Spring shops get around the difficulty by buying a handwinding machine designed for making light compression springs. These are designed so that once you set it up, you can make any number of springs and they will all be exactly the same. Carlson Company, Inc. is one manufacturer of handwinders: the contact data I had for them has proven outdated and as of April 2006 I know of no way to reach them. That's too bad - they make a great product. Using a lathe, especially for light wire, you're likely to get a lot of different springs, even though you think you're doing the same thing each time you wind one. That's the difference between doing the job 'by eye' and having professional equipment.
G G
Wire length First trial Coiling without a lead screw Closed ends Grinding the ends Free length and coil count adjustments Setting solid Heat setting
Wire Length
The first thing to do is figure out how much wire you'll need to make a spring. To do this: 1. Take the outside diameter of the spring and multiply it by 3.3. 2. Take the number of active coils and add 9. 3. Multiply the results of steps 1 and 2 together. 4. Add in a fudge factor. With light wire, make the fudge factor about 6"; with medium wire, about 3" with heavy wire, about 6". 5. Write the result down. If you're WAY off, you can save yourself a lot of wire by cutting it closer. By writing down what you think you'll need, you'll know how much you can change this figure and still have a margin for safety.
2. The second step is to set the speed of the lead screw so that the coils will be properly spaced along the arbor. To do this, measure (or figure out by math, or guess) how far apart the coils should be. The quick way to ballpark the pitch is: 1. Take the free length of the spring and subtract 1 times the diameter of the wire. 2. Divide the result by the number of active coils. 3. Then turn on your lathe and engage the lead screw. Hold a piece of chalk tight against the tool post and move the post toward the arbor until the chalk just touches it. Let the chalk mark the arbor for a couple of turns, and then stop the lathe. 4. Measure the distance between your chalk marks and compare it to what you want. Adjust the speed of your lead screw until they're about the same. Once you've gotten your lead screw setting, you can go ahead and make your first trial spring: 1. Cut a piece of wire to the length you figured out above. Be sure that anyone else in the area stays out of danger while you do the rest of this. Also, get your oven heated up. 2. Put the wire into your setup and move your wire guide to the left, close enough to the pickup pin so that the wire catches on both. Your setup should now look like this:
READ THE NEXT STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE YOU START IT.
3. Start your coiling. Move the chuck DEAD SLOW until the wire has come around for one full coil. Lay down at least two full coils touching each other. The way you do this is to have your wire guide a little to the LEFT of where the wire lays down on the arbor, like this:
4. When you have these first coils laid down on the arbor, you'll then need to do two things at the same time. 1. First, engage your lead screw. If you're winding wire over about .187", DO NOT reach over the wire to grab the lead screw control! Instead, reach UNDER the wire. That way, if the wire guide breaks, the wire won't take your arm off at the shoulder. 2. Second, start counting your coils. Count one each time the point at which the active coils separate from the end coils passes the top of the chuck. Looking at the setup from the top, this is the point you use to count:
3. Keep counting until you reach the number of active coils you want in the finished spring, and
then let a couple more coils wind on, keeping your count going. Then disengage the lead screw. The wire will close up on itself and start to form closed coils. 4. Let a couple of closed coils form on the arbor and then turn off the lathe. DON'T LET THE BACK END OF THE WIRE PASS THE PIN ON THE WIRE GUIDE! Write down your final coil count for reference. 5. Reverse the chuck slowly so that the spring is loose on the arbor. Don't let the pickup pin or the jaws of the chuck catch the front end of the wire as the spring gets loose on the arbor! If there's a lot of extra wire, cut it off. Then, put your spring into the oven and relieve the stress. For this trial, you can leave it in the oven for half an hour. Remember that stress relief will cause music wire springs to close up slightly, while stainless steel will expand. When you've finished this process, let the spring air-cool and measure it to see how close you came to what you want. Check the diameter first. If it's not OK, don't bother going any further: you'll need a different arbor, which will change all the rest of your dimensions. If the diameter is OK, count the number of active coils in your spring. You should be pretty close: for a small number of springs, being a quarter coil off either way is OK. If you're more than a quarter coil off, figure out how much more or less you need and change your coil count for the next trial.
3. 4.
5.
6. 7. 8.
tool post toward the arbor until the chalk leaves a mark an inch or two to the right of the chuck. Turn on the lathe, letting the chalk ride on the arbor, making a complete circle around the arbor. With the handwheel, move the tool post to the right at a steady pace, keeping the chalk in contact with the arbor. The chalk will mark a path approximating the spring you want to make. Count the number of coils you mark with the chalk and stop the rightward motion of the tool post when you reach your trial coil count. Let the lathe continue to run until the chalk has marked the arbor all the way around. Wind a trial spring, making the wire follow your chalk line as closely as possible. If your spring is not right, wash the chalk off the arbor, recalculate the pitch as needed, and try again.
Grinding
BEFORE YOU START, PUT ON A PAIR OF GLOVES. There's nothing quite so much fun as accidentally touching your hand to a moving grinding wheel! Then, make sure that there's nothing flammable nearby: grinding will give off sparks! Take your spring over to your grinding wheel and grind it square. Some tips:
Hold the spring lightly, so that if it catches on the grinding wheel it won't drag your hand along with it. A standard bench grinder will work for light wire, but whatever size grinder you're using, grind on the side of the wheel -- not the front. Start grinding with the free end up, rotating the spring about 1/8 of a turn every so often. Keep the spring square with the grinding wheel. With light wire, it's easy. Heavy wire takes some practice. Spring shops have jigs that they use for keeping the springs square while grinding. Move the spring from side to side across the surface of the grinding wheel (which prevents the spring from digging a groove in it). Keep the body of the spring perpendicular to the flat side of the wheel, and don't forget to dress the wheel from time to time, especially if you're grinding stainless steel or other softer material. Every few seconds, dip the end of the spring into some water to keep it cool. If it starts to glow red, it's WAY too hot. Stainless steel has to be kept cooler than other types of wire. When you've ground the top surface, start to rotate the spring so that the grinding wheel ends up hitting 3/4 of the first coil. Grind until the tip of the first coil is about 3/4 ground away. If you've kept the spring square to your wheel, that'll give you a good grind.
If you're looking at the end of the spring, the ground surface should look like this:
The other thing to check is how square your ground ends are. You can do this by setting your spring down next to a carpenter's square, a machinist's square, a book, or anything
else that stands up straight. Then, holding the bottom end of the spring next to your square, turn the spring around and watch the gap between the square and the top end. If your spring is perfectly square, there will be no gap as you turn the spring around. A small gap is OK, since the ends of the spring will flatten out under load. If there's a big gap, then you need to grind the end some more. (Commercial squareness in spring shops is 3 degrees.) When you're finished grinding the end surfaces, use a file or a pointed grinding stone to get rid of any burrs on both the outside and the inside of the ends.
Free Length
Once you've ground your ends, measure the length of the spring from end to end (free length). If it's not what you want, you may have to adjust your lead screw speed. Here's how to tell what adjustments to make:
G
If the number of active coils is right but the spring is too short, keep the coil count the same and increase the speed of the lead screw. If the number of active coils is right but the spring is too long, keep the coil count the same and decrease the speed of the lead screw. If the number of active coils is too low and the spring is too short, increase your coil count. If the number of active coils is too low and the spring is too long, increase your coil count and decrease the speed of your lead screw. If the number of active coils is too high and the spring is too short, decrease your coil count and increase the speed of your lead screw. If the number of active coils is too high and the spring is too long, decrease your coil count.
One last thing. If your spring is good except that it's just a little long, you may be able to shorten it without any more grinding. There are two ways to do this:
Setting solid: Take the spring and put enough load on it to make all the open coils touch each other all the way around. This is called setting the spring solid, and it might shorten your spring up a little bit. Remember that when you put a load on a compression spring, it'll want to spring back to its free length. If you hold it unevenly, it might fly out sideways. Best bet, if you're going to set your springs solid, is to mount your arbor in a vise, slip your spring(s) onto the arbor, and set them solid using a piece of flat steel, drilled to accommodate the arbor. This will prevent your springs from flying away and hurting someone. Heat setting: Heat setting your springs will make them shorter than setting them solid will. You MUST heat set springs that will be used somewhere hot like inside an engine, for instance. Here's how to do it: 1. Find a rod that's longer than your spring and just a little bit narrower than the inside diameter of the spring. The arbor you used to coil the spring should work nicely. 2. Grind a flat spot near one end and make two collet clamps. Mount one so that the set screw fits into the flat spot on the rod. 3. Slide your spring onto the rod up against the collet clamp and slide the other collet clamp on after it. 4. Set the spring solid ON THE BAR, using a vise as in setting solid above, and tighten the set screw on the second collet clamp so that it holds the spring in that position. AFTER THIS POINT, BE VERY CAREFUL NOT TO POINT EITHER END OF THE ROD AT ANYONE, INCLUDING YOURSELF! 5. Stick the rod, with the spring and collet clamps, into your oven. The longer you let it cook, or the higher the temperature, the shorter the spring will get. 6. Take the rod out of the oven and let it air-cool. 7. MAKING SURE THAT THE ENDS OF THE ROD
POINT AWAY FROM YOU, loosen the second collet clamp. If you're working with heavy wire, mount the tail end of the rod in a vise, so that when the collet clamp breaks loose, it won't go anywhere. The spring will bounce back to near its free length, and you can check it against what you want.
Terms of Use
EXTENSION SPRINGS
This section will tell you how to make extension springs.
G G G G G
(For how to make extended hooks, see the torsion spring page.) I'm also planning to make an animated gif showing the looping process, but for now it's turning out to be a MAJOR project and I'd rather get this site on the web without it than wait until it's done. It will be done, though, so keep checking back ;-)
Once you have your setup done, the first thing you should do is make sure you have enough wire.
Wire Length
If you're using light wire, or if you're making short extension springs with wire up to about .250", you really don't need to know how much wire you need for each spring just be sure you have more than enough. You can figure a rough length by taking the length of the body of the spring, dividing by the wire size (which gives you an approximate count of the number of coils in the spring) and then multiplying that by 3.3. It'll probably come out too long, but that's okay you can use your first couple of springs to set up for making your loops.
If you want to make long extension springs out of wire over about .250" or if you want more than 50 of one design, I recommend that you go to a spring shop and have them make your springs for you.
3. Start your coiling. Move the chuck DEAD SLOW until you're sure that the wire is seated on the pickup pin and the pin on your wire guide. Let a couple of coils lay down on the arbor. READ THE NEXT STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE YOU START IT. 4. When you have your first coils laid down on the arbor, you'll then need to do two things at the same time. 1. First, bring the wire guide a little to the left. You want there to be a gap between the first two coils as the wire lays down on the arbor, but you don't want the wire to run over itself as the arbor turns. The gap should look something like this:
This gap controls what's called initial tension. Initial tension is the force in the wire that makes it necessary to apply some load to the spring in order to break the coils apart. Garage door springs, for instance, have a LOT of initial tension. Slinky toys (which are basically extension springs without loops) have very little. 2. Stop winding when the first of these four things happens: 1. You reach the point beyond which you can't reach the off switch on your lathe. 2. You run out of wire. DON'T LET THE BACK END OF THE WIRE PASS THE PIN ON THE WIRE GUIDE! 3. Your wire guide gets close to the end of your arbor. 4. (if you're just going to make one spring) If the coils on the arbor measure about 11/4 times the length of the body of the spring you're trying to make. 5. Back off the chuck so that the spring is loose on the arbor. If you're using light wire, you can just grip the body of the spring near the chuck and pull the dogleg out, loosening your grip slowly so that the coils unwind slowly. Slide the wire guide and the spring off the arbor. 6. Put your spring into the oven and relieve the stress. Remember, springs made of stainless steel wire will open up a little in the heat, while springs made of music wire will contract.
When you've finished this process, let the spring air-cool and check the diameter. If you did your setup properly, it should be just what you want. Then, look at the coils. They should all lie flat against each other, all the way out to the ends of the spring body. If you see gaps in the body of the spring, that means that you let the wire guide go too far to the right while you were coiling. Now, another word about initial tension. It may or may not be important whether the loops on the ends of your spring line up with each other or cross. If the spring is long enough, you can twist the loops so that they either align or cross, and the initial tension in the coils will hold them in that position. The information that follows, which will tell you how to make loops, assumes that the position of the loops IS important: if it's not, then just make the loops and let the spring's initial tension take care of how they align.
Making Loops
This section will tell you how to make one type of loop; a basic, no-frills type of loop that will do the trick for most springs. There are other types of loops that are stronger and prettier but to make them, you need tooling that is specially made for making this type of loop and nothing else. Brillisour & Moline used to make looping pliers designed for light wire, but I'm afraid they're out of business. If anyone knows of a new source for these, lemme know . NEWS FLASH: Hook-Kon brand looping pliers are available from Advance Car Mover! These are the same pliers mentioned above I've got a pair and they work great for light wire extension springs! Simple loops: 1. Cut off the end of your spring, leaving only coils that touch each other all the way around.
2. Mount your spring between two looping plates in a vise, like this:
3. Reach into the center of the spring coil with your looping rod, hooking the tip of the rod under the first coil: 4. Bend the coil upwards by pushing down on the rod until when you let go, the top of the coil is directly over the center of the spring:
5. With the looping rod, reach under the coil you just bent up and snag the end of the wire with the tip of the rod:
6. Bend the end of the coil so that it aligns with the body of the spring itself:
Now you've made one end of the spring. The next thing to do is to figure out how much you have to cut off the other end to make the whole thing the length you want it to be. If it's a matter of being just a little short, you can always extend your hooks by straightening out the wire after if comes off the
body of the spring. If it's a short spring and you're just making one from the coil you have, count the coils and add enough to make the loop just shy of a full coil. If it's a short spring and you've wound a long coil, do the same thing and separate the first spring from the main body with wire cutters (or with your cutoff wheel, if you're working with heavier wire). You can cut the whole coil to about the right length, but remember, you have to add just shy of a full coil to each end of the spring to make it come out right. If it's a long spring (or you just don't want to bother counting coils), measure the body of the coil and then add about 1-3/4 coils. Once you've trimmed the body to size, go ahead and make the second loop, exactly the same way that you made the first. Then, doublecheck the length of the spring usually, inside one hook to inside the other will give you the best check on this and see if it's what you want. If it's too short, you have a couple of options. You can make the next spring with more coils in the body, or you can make the next spring with the fancier type of loop.
Swivel Hooks
Extension springs are sometimes made with hooks that swivel:
Doing this without kickpress tooling is abysmally difficult, so your best bet, if you have to have this type of spring, is to have it made commercially.
Terms of Use
TORSION SPRINGS
This chapter will tell you how to make torsion springs. Before you start, read the section on The Setup, and have your setup done (spring coil diameter correct). Don't forget that torsion springs come left-handed and righthanded. Be sure to make your setup for the correct hand. If you're making a left-handed spring, remember that the setup and the motion of the chuck and arbor will be OPPOSITE to what is described.
G G G G
Wire length First trial spring Torsion spring ends Extended hooks
Wire length
When you're ready to start coiling, the first thing you need to do is figure out how much wire you'll need to make your spring. Here's how: 1. Take the outside diameter of the spring and multiply it by 3.3. 2. Take the result of this and multiply it by the number of coils in the spring. 3. Figure out about how much wire you'll need to form each end. Allow a couple of inches on each end to grab onto when making your bends. Add those two numbers together. 4. Add together the results from steps 2 and 3. 5. Add in a fudge factor (about 10%, but not less than 6"). 6. Write the result down. If you're WAY off, you can
save yourself a lot of wire by cutting it closer. By writing down what you think you'll need, you'll know how much you can change this figure and still have a margin for error. When in doubt, err on the side of safety and plan to use more wire, rather than less.
READ THE NEXT STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE YOU START IT. 5. Start your coiling. Move the chuck DEAD SLOW until you have completed your first full coil. When you have your first coil laid down on the arbor, you'll then need to do two things at the same time. 1. First, bring the wire guide a little to the left. You want there to be a gap between the first two coils as the wire lays down on the arbor, but you don't want the gap to be big. In fact, the smaller, the better, as long as it's always there. The gap should look like this:
2. Second, start counting your coils. Count one each time the pickup pin passes top dead center. Stop winding when you've wound one coil MORE than your spring should have when finished, or when you run out of wire. DON'T LET THE BACK END OF THE WIRE PASS THE PIN ON THE WIRE GUIDE! 6. When you've stopped coiling, mark the top of the chuck with a chalk line, and write (on the chuck) the final coil count. You can rig up a pointer out of tie wire that will indicate when the chuck reaches the exact stopping point as marked by the line. 7. Back off the chuck SLOWLY until the spring is loose on the arbor. Don't let the pickup pin or one of the jaws of the chuck catch on the front end of the wire and start to unwind your spring! When the spring is loose, slide it off the arbor and cut the excess off the back end, leaving yourself what you need to form the longer of the two ends. 8. Put your spring into the oven and relieve the stress. For this trial, you can leave it in the oven for half an hour: all you want to do is make sure you have the right diameter.
The process of baing out the stress in the wire may change the dimensions of your spring. Stainless steel coils will generally expand slightly when heated: music wire coils will generally contract slightly. When you've finished this process, let the spring air-dry and measure it to see how close you came to what you want. Check the diameter first. If it's not OK, don't bother going any further: you'll need a different arbor, which will change all the rest of your dimensions. If the diameter is OK, count the number of coils in your spring. You should be pretty close: if you're only making one or two springs, being an eighth of a coil off either way is OK you can always strip out or add a small amount of coil by hand. If you're more than an eighth of a coil off, figure out how much more or less you need and change the chalk mark on your chuck so that the next time you wind a spring, you can stop coiling at the right spot. Lastly, look at the coils themselves. They should all lie flat against each other, all the way out to the ends of the spring body. If you see gaps in the body of the spring, that means that you let the wire guide go too far to the right while you were coiling. If you see a gap at one end (usually the front end), that means that when you started coiling, your wire guide was too far to the right of the pickup pin. Finally, set this spring aside to use in setting up for bending the legs. If needed, repeat the coiling process again until you get what you want. At this point, you're ready to begin work on the ends.
want, bends and all, stress relieve it again, doublecheck all your measurements, and, if possible, test it where it'll be used. Then, make all the bends in as many springs as you need. Take the extra springs to figure out how best to form the ends the way you want them. There are a million different ways to form the ends of torsion springs, so what this section will tell you is general principles to follow. Start with straight ends. If you're using light wire, the curve of the coil will probably make the ends of your springs curved. The curve is called cast. You can straighten it out by running the wire over your thumbnail or by bending the wire in the direction opposite to the cast by hand. Heavy wire usually doesn't have this problem, unless it's stainless steel. To straighten heavy wire, secure the spring in a vise and use a pipe for leverage, straightening the wire by hand a little at a time. Make your bends gradual. This is the difference between a gradual bend and a sharp bend:
A sharp bend may cause the wire to break when a load is placed on the spring. As you figure out how to form your ends, keep this in mind. The best tool to use for light wire is round-nose pliers. Always relieve the stress in your springs again after you form the ends. A second stress relief won't likely change any dimensions, but it will allow the bends in the formed ends to stay in the shape you put them in when they're under load.
Easy Bends: Here's a quick way to make torsion spring ends. It's not too precise, but then again, maybe your spring doesn't have to be, either. Find a rod that you can use to make the bend. Try not to have it skinnier than twice the diameter of your wire. Mount the rod in your vise, along with a pickup pin. Put the end of the spring between the pickup pin and the rod. Measure the distance so that when you're done, it comes out right. Using a wire guide or a bending pipe, bend the end the way you want it. (With very light wire, you can do this by hand.) If the spring slips as you bend the end around, put some pressure on the coil body so that the pickup pin grabs it solidly.
If you're just making a few springs, you can probably get away with doing each one by hand. If you want to make a lot of the same kind of spring, go ahead and make a more sophisticated bending jig see the section on tooling for how to do this.
Extended hooks If you're making an extension spring with extended hooks, like this:
you'll need to treat the ends as if the spring was a torsion spring. The first step in forming extended hooks is to make sure that the ends of the wire are straight. Having done that, the next step is to lay the ends over. Here's how you do this: 1. Take the narrow plate with the knife edge that you made when you were making tooling and shove it in between the coils of your spring, like this:
2. Put a spacer plate the same size as your wire across the bottom of your spring. 3. Put the layover plate you made across the end of the spring, a little below the center of the coil. At this point, the spring and the three plates should look like this:
4. Chuck the three plates with the spring, if possible up in a vise. 5. Using your hand (for light wire) or a pipe (for medium wire), bend the end of the spring down over the bending plate. While you do this, hold the spring down with your other hand so that it doesn't pop off the knife plate. You'll need to bend the wire MORE than 90 degrees to get a 90- degree bend. The two most common bugs that happen when doing this are A) the end comes up outside the coil and B) the end hooks in toward the center of the spring. To fix these errors, A) raise or B) lower the spacer plate. This procedure will give you ends that come straight off the ends of the coil, and fom here you should be able to form hooks or loops, as you wish.
Terms of Use
Figuring the arbor length First coils H With a drill H With a hand winder H With a lathe Left-handed spring setup
(For info on coiling without a lead screw, see the section on compression springs. NOTE: I'm planning to make an animated gif showing the coiling process, but it's turning out to be a MAJOR project and I'd rather get this site on the web without it than wait until it's done. It will be done, though, so keep checking back ;-)
The Arbor
Making springs by hand basically consists of bending wire around a rod called an arbor or mandrel. The arbor is secured in the chuck of a winding machine (typically either a drill, a hand winder, or a lathe). This section will tell you how to get the right diameter arbor, but it's also important to get the right length. Correct arbor length is important because it's difficult (not impossible, but difficult) to coil a spring on an arbor that's not long enough. Here's how to figure out how long your arbor has to be. 1. Estimate the amount of arbor you'll need to accommodate the spring itself. Know that spring wire wound on an arbor will take up more space than the same spring will after it's off the arbor. How much more depends on the number of coils and the size of the wire. Generally, the more coils in the spring, the more it will contract after coiling. Also generally, the smaller the wire, the more space it will take up on the arbor. And lastly, the larger the arbor, the more room you'll need to accommodate your spring while coiling. A couple of examples might help with all this: A heavy torsion spring with 5 coils will generally not uncoil more than about 1/2 a coil after winding. Giving yourself as much slack as you can, your arbor might be 6-8" longer than the spring, plus whatever length you need to chuck it up. H A similar torsion spring made from very light wire (same diameter arbor) will lose more coils, and take up more room on the arbor when coiling. Because it's short to begin with, though, the 6-8" addition to the arbor length should still be okay. H A long extension spring (like on a screen door) should be wound on an arbor at least a foot longer than the spring itself, again plus whatever you need for the chuck. 2. Add in the amount of arbor you'll need to secure it
H
safely in the chuck. 3. Add in a fudge factor 10% will do just for the heck of it. Remember that your arbor should be at least the length you figure out here: there's no real maximum length until your winding machine won't support the weight.
7. READ THIS STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE DOING IT! When your setup is done, go ahead and turn on the drill. Keep the speed LOW, and keep your finger on the trigger. All you want to do is make a few coils, to check the diameter. As the arbor starts to turn, two things will happen. The wire guide will kick upward: you can steady it with your right hand. It will also try to slide away to your right: let it slide for an inch or so, and then move your right hand to the left until the coils of wire lie flat against each other. What you're looking for is this: Stop the drill before the back end of the wire reaches the pin in the wire guide. The gap in the diagram, by the way, is a good thing. If you see it while the coils are laying down, that means the coils will be tight up against each other when you're done. (In an extension spring, how tight the coils are is called initial tension. There's more info on this on the extension spring page.)
8. Reverse the drill SLOWLY until the coils hang free on the arbor. If you can't reverse the drill, you can grab the coils tight near the chuck and pull the dogleg out of the chuck. Loosen your grip on the coils slowly and let them unwind themselves until they're not under any tension. Then let go. 9. Slide the wire guide and the coils off the arbor. Check the diameter of the coils and see how close you are to what you want. Remember, if you need an exact diameter, the size of the coil may change when you relieve the stress in the spring. See the page on finishing techniques for information on this. 10. If the diameter is not what you want, go to a different size arbor, repeating steps 2-9 until the arbor is the right size. That's it.
If you're using a hand winder: 1. First, make sure that your hand winder is mounted solidly. Mount it in a vise, or bolt it onto a workbench. Mount your hand winder so that the handle is to your left and the chuck is in front of your left shoulder. 2. Next, chuck up your arbor. The diameter of the arbor should be a little less than the inside diameter of the spring you want to make. 3. Get a piece of wire maybe a couple of feet long. Cut it off from the coil and make a 90-degree bend in one end, giving you a dogleg end about an inch long. 4. Put your wire guide onto the arbor. Hold it with your right hand and position it an inch or so away from the chuck. 5. Stick the dogleg end of your wire between the two topmost jaws of the drill chuck. Shove it in as far as the bend in the wire. 6. Bring the wire guide near enough for the wire to catch in the groove in the pin. Keep the wire guide away from the chuck. At this point, your setup should look something like this:
7. When your setup is done, go ahead and start turning the handle. Turn it so that the TOP of the chuck moves AWAY from you. As the arbor starts to turn, two things will happen. The wire guide will press upward: you can steady it with your right hand. It will also try to slide away to your right: let it slide for an inch or so, and then move your right hand to the left until the coils of wire lie flat against each other. What you're looking for is this: Stop turning the handle when you have three or more complete coils side by side on the arbor. The gap in the diagram, by the way, is a good thing. If you see it while the coils are laying down, that means the coils will be tight up against each other when you're done. (In an extension spring, how tight the coils are is called initial tension. There's more info on this on the extension spring page.) 8. Turn the handle the other way SLOWLY until the coils hang free on the arbor. Don't unwind so far that
one of the jaws of the chuck catches the wire dogleg and starts to unwind the spring for you! 9. Slide the wire guide and the coils off the arbor. Check the diameter of the coils and see how close you are to what you want. Remember, if you need an exact diameter, the size of the coil may change when you relieve the stress in the spring. See the page on finishing techniques for information on this. 10. If the diameter is not what you want, change your arbor, repeating steps 2-9 until the spring is the right size. That's it.
If you're using a lathe: 1. If this is the first time you're using the lathe, make sure you're familiar with it. Know how to stop the dang thing before you turn it on! Also, make sure you have a clear space around you (common sense). 2. Next, chuck up your arbor. The diameter of the arbor should be a little less than the inside diameter of the spring you want to make. 3. If you're using a four-jaw chuck, you'll have to center your arbor. Do this by turning on the lathe and holding a piece of chalk in your hand, right next to the tool post. Move your hand slowly towards the arbor until the chalk leaves a mark. Then, stop the lathe and adjust the jaws of the chuck so that the arbor moves away from the mark. Tighten the jaws and do this again, until the arbor is close to being centered (it doesn't have to be exact). Next, back off one of the jaws of the chuck and put your pickup pin between the jaw and the arbor. Let it stick out past the end of the jaw about twice the diameter of the wire you'll be using (see the diagram below). 4. What type of wire guide you use depends on how heavy your wire is. For medium and light wire, you
can use the same type of guide as for a hand winder or drill: for heavy wire (over about "), use a tool postmounted wire guide. If you're using light wire, you can read the directions for this step as if you were using a hand winder (above). Otherwise, complete this step as below. Put your wire guide into the tool post. It should be positioned just a little under the top of the arbor. With small wire, the distance between the arbor and the wire guide should be fairly close; for medium wire, 36"; for heavy wire, 6-12". The groove in your wire guide should also be fairly close to the tool post: the heavier the wire, the closer it should be. Cinch the wire guide down TIGHT. This is what your setup should look like edge-on from where you're standing:
Note the horizontal clearance between the right end of the pickup pin and the left end of the wire guide. 5. Get a piece of wire a few feet long (the heavier the wire, the longer the piece: also, the bigger the arbor, the longer the piece). Cut it off from the coil. 6. Position the pickup pin of the lathe at the top of the chuck and thread your wire UNDER the wire guide, OVER the arbor, and UNDER the pickup pin. At this point, your setup should look something like this:
7. READ THIS STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE DOING IT! Before you start the lathe, make sure you have one hand on the motor control and the other on the lead screw lever. (If you're coiling without a lead screw, see the section on compression springs on how to control the motion of the tool post as you coil.) Reach UNDER the wire with this hand, so that if the wire guide breaks, the wire will not snap upwards and catch you in the armpit. Start the lathe
DEAD SLOW so that the TOP of the chuck moves AWAY from you. Keep the tool post steady and watch the front end of the wire as it comes around. It should clear the ways and the wire guide. As the arbor starts to turn, the wire will close up on itself. Keep the tool post steady until a small gap
appears in the coils, like this. When this gap appears, let the tool post move slowly to the right and continue coiling until you have about three full coils side by side on the arbor: 8. Stop the lathe and run it backwards SLOWLY until the coils hang free on the arbor. Don't let the front end of the wire catch on the jaws of the chuck as they come around. 9. Slide the coils off the arbor and check the diameter to see how close you are to what you want. Remember, if you need an exact diameter, the size of the coil may change when you relieve the stress in the spring. See the page on finishing techniques for information on this. 10. If the diameter is not what you want, change your arbor, repeating steps 2-9 until it's the right size. That's it.
Left-Handed Springs
There's one more little oddity you should know about: torsion springs come left-handed and right- handed:
Depending on what you want your spring to do, you may need one or the other, or both. The setups described above tell you how to set up for a right-handed spring. If you want to make a left-handed spring, you'll need to make a lefthanded setup because a right-handed setup will not work for a left-handed spring! Left-Handed Spring Setup Everything you read about setups for right-handed springs is exactly the same for left-handed springs, except for two things. When winding a left-handed spring: 1. The wire will travel OVER the pin on the wire guide, UNDER the arbor, and OVER the pickup pin. 2. The top of the chuck will be going TOWARD you as you make your coils. The basic setup for a tool post-mounted wire guide will look like this:
hand-held wire guide: the guide pin will need to stick out in the opposite direction from what was shown above. The only difference this will make is that your first coil count will be somewhat of a guess, because you won't be able to see when the gap passes bottom dead center of the arbor. On your second trial spring, though, you should be able to correct this exactly with your chalk mark.
Terms of Use
TOOLING
The whole purpose of tooling is to keep the wire under control while you make your springs. The important parts of the wire to keep under control are the two ends. This section will tell you how to make the tooling you'll need to keep the ends of your wire under control:
G G
G G G G G G G G
Pickup pin Wire Guide for light wire (hand held) Wire Guide for heavy wire (tool post mount) Looping Plates Looping Rod Layover Plate Bending jig (vise mounted) Spinner (light wire bending jig) Bending pipe Passivating basket Grinding stage
The important parts of the wire that you want to keep under control are the two ends:
G
The front end the part of the wire that you use to begin coiling, and The back end the part of the wire that is last to be coiled, or that most closely approximates that condition.
For heavier wire, you'll need to make a pickup pin to keep the front end under control. A pickup pin can be made from a square bar, using a grinding wheel: Notice how the pickup pin has been ground to accommodate both the arbor and the wire. It's better not to use a three-jaw chuck for heavier wire, but if there's no alternative, you can control the front end of the wire be either drilling a hole in one of the jaws of the chuck and press- fitting a pickup pin into it, or welding a pickup pin onto one of the jaws. Again, it's much safer to use a four-jaw chuck. 'Nuff said.
For larger wire, you'll need to make a wire guide that fits into the tool post of your lathe:
If the spring you want to make is longer than your lathe, you will need to make some special tooling. Write to me and I'll tell you how.
Finishing Tooling
You'll also need to make tools to help you finish the ends of extension and torsion springs. Again, the tooling you'll need will depend on the size of your wire. Extension springs: Most often, the ends of extension springs are formed like either loops or hooks. To form these you will need two tools: the first is a set of looping plates, which can be made out of flat steel with a grinder. To make looping plates, first take two pieces of stock (1/4" thick, width about 1 times the outside diameter of your spring ) and chuck them up in a vise, one at a time. Bend the ends to about 100 degrees. Then, cut off all but a small amount of the end that you bent over:
Using the grinding wheel, carve out a hollow in each end. Taper it down so that the edge is sharp enough to grab between two coils of wire. These plates work best with relatively stiff extension springs. If you find you're having trouble keeping the body of the spring steady between the plates, you can always cut some grooves on the inside face of the plates to help the wire stay put. Also note that the sloped area that's been ground away at the top of each plate is somewhat larger than the diameter of the spring. The second tool you'll need to form the ends of extension springs is a hooking rod: again, you can use your grinding wheel to make this tool. This is a hand-held tool that you'll need a fair degree of control over, so make it about 6-14" long (depending on the size of the spring wire) out of stick that's about a third again as thick as the wire you're coiling. Notice that the end is relieved to accommodate the wire. Extended hooks: You may want to make an extension spring with extended hooks, like this:
The best way to do this is to coil the spring as if it were a torsion spring and then bend the ends over to form the extended hooks (see the page on torsion springs).
If you're making this kind of spring, you'll need to make a different set of plates. The first will be a thin steel plate with one edge ground knife-sharp. For the other plate, take a piece of flat steel and bend it over just like you did for the looping plates, only bend it over a little more and don't trim quite so much off the end: You might also want to make a bending pipe to aid in bending wire larger than can easily be bent by hand. Start with a short section of pipe or tubing that's a little bigger on the inside than your wire. Then, simply cut off the end on a diagonal, like this:
See the section on extension springs for how to use the plates and the bending pipe to form your ends. Torsion springs: The ends of torsion springs can be formed in a million different ways. The key is to make the bends smooth: the sharper the bend, the more likely it'll break: If you're using light wire, you can probably use roundnose pliers to form your ends. For medium wire, make a layover plate (above) and use a length of pipe to grab the end of the wire. This will give you enough leverage to get it to bend. For wire too big to bend by hand, just heat the bend area of the wire with your acetylene torch. Don't get it too hot just warm it up enough so that it will bend with the help of a piece of pipe.
Bending jigs
This is the simplest bending jig I know of: it uses tooling you've already made! In your vise, chuck up a piece of bar stock, maybe a little smaller than your arbor, and a pickup pin suitable for the wire you're using. Then, when you lay the leg of your spring between the bar stock and the pickup pin, you can use a wire guide to made the leg bend around the bar stock. Keeping careful track of how much wire is used up making the bend will allow you to make your bends fairly precisely - with practice, within 1/10". You can also make a more complex bending jig capable of handling virtually any light wire bend:
You can make stops and guides mounted on top of the jig (to control your spring) out of thin steel, and other stops mounted on the side of the jig out of thicker stock 1/8" works well to control how far the handle should move (to control the amount of bend).
Passivating basket
If you're working with stainless steel wire, you'll need a passivating basket. All a passivating basket has to do is hold the springs while they're taking a bath in some nice acid. You can make one very easily using stainless steel mesh. Just bend the edges of the mesh up to form a basket shape large enough to hold your springs, stitch the edges together with stainless steel wire, and make a handle, also out of stainless steel. Don't use anything but stainless to make your passivating basket
Grinding stage
A grinding stage is simply a flat piece of material (either steel or wood will work) attached to your grinder. The purpose of a grinding stage is to provide a flat surface that your spring lays on while you're grinding the ends. Make your stage so that it faces the flat side of the grinding wheel, and is at least as wide as the grinding wheel's side surface.
Terms of Use
EQUIPMENT
This section will tell you what equipment you will need to make springs.
G G G
G G G
Winding machines Grinders and wheels Finishing equipment H Ovens H Passivating tanks H Plating Hand tools Testing equipment Tooling stock
Winding Machines
The basic thing you'll need is a winding machine of some sort. A winding machine is something that will pull your wire around and make it coil up into a spring shape. What kind of winding machine you'll need depends on what size wire you'll be working with, and also, how many springs you want to make. If you want to make more than about 50 springs of one kind, it'll probably be worth your while to have your springs made commercially. You can find out about how spring factories operate: the Addendum also has a list of spring shops that have a Web presence. You can also find spring shops in your area by consulting the phone book. Added 3-16-2004: I recently found a site that details a very basic hand-winding setup. Here it is. Light Wire For light wire (.003-.025") extension springs, you can use a hand drill mounted in a vise. A variable-speed drill is best: set it on the lowest speed you can.
For light wire torsion springs (up to about .125"), you can use a hand winder:
For light wire compression springs and for medium wire (.025-.187") springs of all types, you should have a lathe. For wire bigger than about .187", you'll need a lathe strong enough to pull the wire: for compression springs in all sizes of wire, your lathe should have a back gear and a working lead screw. Your lathe doesn't have to be a precision machine. In fact, the heavier the wire you want to work with, the better it is if your lathe is a piece of junk. All it has to have is a working motor, a tool post (for compression and torsion springs), and a reliable back gear, and, also for compression springs, a variable-pitch lead screw. Other than that, it can be as sloppy as you want. Wood lathes, by the way, may work for light extension springs if the tooling can be made to fit.
Grinding Equipment
You'll need a grinding wheel for several purposes. The best kind is a double wheel, where you can have a grinding wheel in one side and a cutoff wheel on the other. Metal trades suppliers can sell you the wheels.
For all springs, you'll have to be able to cut away the waste wire from the ends of your springs. You can do this with wire cutters (for wire up to about .062"), with a cutoff wheel, or with an acetylene torch. (One note: an acetylene torch will not be effective on largediameter stainless steel wire.) For compression springs, you may want to have the ends ground square with respect to the body of the spring. You can do this with an abrasive wheel. For heavy compression springs, you may need a bigger grinder: a small grinder will take forever. Also for compression springs, you may want to deburr the inside and outside of the ends after grinding. You can do this with a conical grinding stone mounted in a drill (for the inside) and a regular abrasive wheel (for the outside). You'll also need a grinding wheel to make some of your tooling: most of the tooling you'll need can be made rough, and a grinding wheel will work just fine.
Finishing Equipment
After you've wound your springs and formed the ends, you'll need to get rid of the stress that bending the wire has caused. To do this, you need an oven. How hot your oven needs to go depends on what material you use for your spring: Oil tempered wire, music wire, and 302 stainless 17-7 stainless and chrome silicon Chrome vanadium Most exotic materials
It's probably best not to use your kitchen oven for oil tempered wire, chrome silicon, or chrome vanadium. The wire will come coated with oil, which will burn off in the oven. If your oven won't reach the temperature you need, find a potter who has a kiln you can use. For stainless steel wire, you'll also need a passivating tank to remove the chemical coating on the wire. This is a tank made out of
stainless steel (an old sink is fine) and filled with acid. If you want your springs to be plated, send them out to a plating shop. Don't try to do your own plating unless you're already in the plating business.
Hand Tools
You'll need some basic hand tools:
G G G G G G G G G G
A vise (either floor- or bench-mounted) Wire cutters (6" diagonal) Needle-nose pliers Calipers (if dimensions are critical) Tape measure (if dimensions are rough) Crescent wrench Acetylene torch (if working with wire over about .250") Bolt cutters (for wire between .080-.250") Round nose pliers (for forming the ends of torsion springs) Chalk
Testing Equipment
Depending on what kind of machine your spring is going to work in, probably the best way to test a spring is to make one and see if it does the job. Other than that, here are a few ways to perform rough testing on springs. To test extension springs, you can always hang the spring from the ceiling and load it up with weights on the other end. For medium-sized compression springs, you can made the spring act as a limited-travel extension spring (see extension springs for how to do this) and test them the same way. This method will not work for light or heavy compression springs just medium ones. I don't know of a simple way to make a really accurate testing rig for torsion springs: best bet is to just plug it in and see if it works.
Tooling Stock
To make the tooling you need, you should have some pieces of flat stock (mild steel) and some bar stock. You'll get the idea of what kind of stock you'll need for your tooling as you read the section on tooling. You can find this kind of stuff at your local scrap dealer or junkyard: they usually sell it by the pound. You'll also need arbor stock (an arbor is the bar or pipe you use to wrap the wire around to make the spring). Once you know what size arbor you need, visit your local scrap yard: it doesn't have to be pretty, but remember, it does have to be long enough. If you're working with heavy wire, you may need a welding rig to make your tooling safe.
Forward to Tooling
Terms of Use
G G G
General Safety
Springs under load want to return to their original shape. The same goes for spring wire. Spring wire will try to straighten itself out if given the chance: don't let your body get in its way. Small wire Small wire (diameter less than about .025") will not hurt you if it hits you. On the other hand, small wire is nothing more than an edge, waiting for something to cut. Don't use your hand to try to stop wire that's moving, especially if it's moving under power (like being pulled by a lathe). Instead, wait till it stops moving. Gloves are an excellent idea, too. Medium wire Medium wire (diameter from about .025" - .312") is too wide to act as an edge, and usually not massive enough to break bones, but it can raise quite a knot if you get in its way. Again, always keep track of where the ends of the wire are, and if they start to move, get out of the way. Heavy wire Heavy wire (diameter greater than about .312") needs respect. If it gets loose, it can EASILY break bones, or worse. Stainless steel Stainless steel is a lot softer than other types of wire. When cut, the end of the wire is like a knife edge. Always keep track of where the end of the wire is, and keep your hands away from it while it's moving.
Handling Wire
The two most dangerous times are when you're breaking open a coil of wire and when you're actually winding a spring. Breaking open coils Once you have your wire, you'll need to take it out of its coil. The coil may be wrapped in paper take that off first. Under the paper, the wire will be tied. Light wire will be tied with string. Medium wire will be tied with tie wire. Large wire will be tied with metal bands. Whatever size wire you have, remember that the coil should have only two ends. One will be on the inside of the coil, and the other will be on the outside. You'll normally use wire from the inside, to avoid tangling. Always make a hook on the inside end so it's easy to find again:
To break open a coil of small (up to about .125") wire, cut all the ties except two. Don't cut the closest tie holding the outside end of the wire, and the tie most directly opposite to that one. To remove wire from the coil, start with the end on the inside of the coil: this will keep the coil from tangling. Grab the end of the wire and cut off the hook. Pull it slightly, until you can see the gap between it and the rest of the coil. Grab the wire at the gap and pull the end free from the tie holding it. Repeat this process, working around the coil, until you have the length you need.
Medium-sized wire
(.125 - .312") can be handled the same way, except that you should keep three ties instead of two. When uncoiling wire larger than .250", you should lay the coil flat on the ground
(.312 - .625") needs special handling. First of all, you'll probably be using a hoist or forklift to move the coil, because of the weight. Lay the coil on top of something (a 2x4 or a pipe works great) to keep one end off the ground so that you can pick it up when you're done. Stand inside the coil from now on! Then, take a length of tie wire and double it over. Loop it twice around the coil, right next to the second tie holding the inside end of the wire. Pull it tight and twist it so that you have a 'pigtail' and the tie wire is too tight to move by hand. Then, cut the first two original ties. Grab the end of the wire and flip it over the coil, so that it sticks out.
Go to the next tie and repeat this process, working your way around the coil until you have the length you need. You can use heavy bolt cutters or an acetylene torch to cut the wire. If heavy wire gets away from you and starts to come undone all by itself, the very best thing to do is
G G
Coiling
If you're using a lathe to make your springs, you'll be standing there, letting the lathe pull the wire. The lathe will do what you want, but it will not know to stop if things get out of control. So, before you start the lathe, figure out what you're
going to do if things go haywire. Know how to stop the lathe, and know which way you can safely run. Never reach over the wire to get to your lathe controls, especially when working with heavy wire. Reach under it and avoid injury if your wire guide breaks. Keep the lathe speed DEAD SLOW: with heavy wire, 10 rpm is about right. Don't grab onto wire that's being fed into the lathe. Stop the lathe and back it off until there's no tension in the wire before you put your hands near. NEVER try to guide wire by hand. Use tooling.
Lastly, make a hook in the inside end of the wire, so you can find it again easily when you need to.
Storing Wire
Safety first: always store your wire someplace where kids can't get at it. Common sense second: keep your wire dry. Steel wire will rust if it gets wet. More common sense: keep your wire tight. When you're finished working with a coil of wire, make a hook in the inside end (so you can find it again easily) and tie the coil securely. Be especially careful with heavy wire, which should be tied with at least six doubled strands of tie wire, each looped around the coil twice and cinched tight. Still more common sense: if you live in an area that has earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes, etc., be sure that you chock your coils of wire so that they don't get loose and start to move around when mother nature starts acting up.
Forward to Equipment.
Terms of Use
SPRING MATERIALS
This section will tell you about the different kinds of material that springs are made out of. It will also tell you where to get your wire -- make sure you read the Safety section so you know how to handle it safely once you've got it.
G G
Types of Wire
Springs are usually made from alloys of steel. The most common spring steels are music wire, oil tempered wire, chrome silicon, chrome vanadium, and 302 and 17-7 stainless. Other materials can also be formed into springs, depending on the characteristics needed. Some of the more common of these exotic metals include beryllium copper, phosphor bronze, Inconel, Monel, and titanium. The following table summarizes the more important properties of each material:
Material
Common Sizes
Music Wire
.003-.250
A high-carbon steel wire used primarily for applications demanding high strength, medium price, and uniformly high quality. Guitar and piano strings are made from this material, as are most small springs. Music wire will contract under heat, and can be plated. This is the workhorse steel spring wire, being used for many applications in which superior strength or uniformity is not crucial. Will not generally change dimensions under heat. Can be plated. Also available in square and rectangular sections.
.010-.625
.010-.500
These are higher quality, higher strength versions of Oil Tempered wire, used in hightemperature applications such as automotive valve springs. Will not generally change dimensions under heat. Can be plated. Stainless steels will not rust, making them ideal for the food industry and other environments containing water or steam. 302 series stainless will expand slightly under heat: 17-7 will usually not change. Cannot be plated. These specialty alloys are sometimes made into springs which are designed to work in extremely high-temperature environments, where magnetic fields present a problem, or where corrosion resistance is needed in a high-
Stainless Steel
.005-.500
.010-.125
temperature working environment. They are much more costly than the more common stocks and cannot be plated. Generally will not change dimensions under heat. Titanium .032-.500 Used primarily in air- and spacecraft because of its extremely light weight and high strength, titanium is also extremely expensive and dangerous to work with as well: titanium wire will shatter explosively under stress if its surface is scored. Generally will not change dimensions under heat. Cannot be plated.
Titanium is the strongest material, but it is very expensive. Next come chrome vanadium and chrome silicon, then music wire, and then oil tempered wire. The stainless and exotic materials are all weaker than the rest.
Buying wire
Spring wire is made in common sizes (see table above) and in
special sizes to order. The common sizes that are manufactured are available within the ranges specified at intervals ranging from a couple of thousandths of an inch (for the smaller sizes) to sixteenths of inches (for the larger sizes). Metric-measure sizes are available outside the US. These spring wire materials may be bought from steel suppliers in two forms: coils and straightened- and-cut bars. Unless you are dealing with extremely close tolerances, exotic materials, or need a stock size that is not commonly manufactured, you'll probably find it most economical to buy your stock in coils. Bought in coils, spring steel is generally sold by the pound: the coils range in size from about 6 inches (for wire under .005') to 7 feet (for wire in the .437-.500' range) in diameter. The smaller coils are generally shipped UPS, while the larger sizes require truck transport as well as special unloading and storage facilities. Finding a source of supply is as easy as looking in the phone book: if you're in a rural area, try the local library which will have Yellow Pages for the major metropolitan areas -- try Detroit or Los Angeles for starters. You can also contact the Spring Manufacturers' Institute and ask them for a copy of Springs magazine, which is filled with suppliers' advertisements (as well as technically interesting articles). The Addendum also lists some wire manufacturers and suppliers. One caution: you should not order straightened-and-cut wire until you're SURE you know what you want. Once you get your material, you'll find it impossible to return if the bars are an inch too short. And one note: when spring wire is made, it develops what's known as a 'cast' from being tied into round coils. If you strip wire from a coil, it will likely not be perfectly straight: the 'natural' curvature of the wire is 'cast'. The cast of the wire will introduce an extremely small variance in the physical dimensions of the springs made from the wire -- it's only a problem when you're working with very close dimensional
Forward to Safety.
Terms of Use
Terms of Use
The information on springmaking that is presented on this web site is made available free of charge to anyone who wants it. You can download the entire site or any portion of it to use or distribute as you see fit, commercial use excepted. That means, it's free, so if you want to give it away for free, you can. But you can't charge for it, or make it part of anything that's charged for. Plain, simple English. I think you get the idea. Best, - Dave P.S.: Close this window to return to the site.
The winding tool is two scraps of some kind of 1"x2" hardwood (maybe oak?).
Cut two identical lengths, clamp them together, and drill them in two spots with 1/4" holes, closer to the centre, for the 1/4" bolts. After bolting them together, drill all the way the sides with a 5/16" bit (for a 5/16" coil forming rod). They must be tightly bolted together when you do this, or the two wood pieces may slide over each other as you drill, resulting in hole halves that don't line up. Turn it over, and drill only half way through the 5/16" hole with a 7/16" bit (for 16 gauge wire), so that the hole is larger on one end than on the other.
Take one of the pieces, and saw a slot in the end, stopping at the inner side of the 7/16" portion of the hole. (The photo below is a bit misleading because the angle I took it at makes it look like I sawed it only to
the inner side of the 5/16" hole.) I chose this half because I'm right-handed, and I wanted to turn the crank clockwise, feed the wire from the front of the mandrel, and have the coils to come out with a twist that has the opposite handedness from that of the threads on screws and bolts. That way, when I use my snips (also right-handed) to cut the rings I can see the end of the coil butt up against the upper jaw of the snips. If I was left-handed and used left-handed snips, then I would have cut the slot in the other half of the tool. Notice the grooves in the wider hole. These were formed when I first used it to wind wire, and result in a gap of about 1/3 the diameter of the wire between each turn. I haven't tried it, but I'm pretty sure that if you cut the slot at a slight angle, that gap would be a bit bigger. I could have just drilled a 1/16" diameter hole, but that would mean I'd have to disassemble the tool every time I wanted to start a new coil. The slot allows me to find the hole in the rod when I insert the wire end, and then give it a 1/4 turn to lock it in.
Here's a closeup of the bending tool in action. I hold the tool in my left hand to keep it upright, and crank the mandrel with my right. The spool of wire feeds up from the floor, to my left. If I had a stand for the wire spool to roll freely, I could just put it on the bench behind the mandrel, and just let the free end of the tool slide along the mandrel base. As the coil gets near the left end of the mandrel (one full width of the tool between the tool and the left rod support) , I just snip the wire and allow the end to feed in, and crank it until the last turn clears the right side of the tool. I pry the other end of the wire out of the hole in the rod and snip it, allowing me to pull the rod out of the support and remove the coil. This setup only wastes about 1/2 of a ring's worth of wire per coil.
Even without the wooden base for the mandrel and crank, you can simply use vise grips to turn the rod, and hold the bending tool with the other hand.
Of course, after I made this wooden tool, I discovered that Matthew E. Johnston describes a tool with a similar function, at http://members.tripod.com/~mailmaker/tools.html. He also shows how to make two other kinds, at http://members.tripod.com/~mailmaker/winding.html. Hew of Kilraag (mka: John Rose)
NEW STUFF
Here's a summary of updates and additions to the site that were made since January, 2003. None of the new stuff is indexed on the Site Map (mainly because I'm lazy) but this page itself is. The terms of use that apply to the main part of the site also apply here, natch.
October, 2003
Finally did the graphics for the clock springs page. About time! Also freshened the links page.
A few new links. Uploaded freshened links including, finally, another how-to article that was published in Home Shop Machinist. Added pages covering clock and power springs and my resume as a springmaker. Uploaded freshened links.
January, 2003
springmaking resume
MY RESUME
as a Springmaker
Type: Free length: Outside diameter: Total coils: Active coils: Wire size: Wire type: Ends:
THIS SPRING, shown next to a 1-liter bottle of water for scale, is a shock absorber used at the bottom of a mine shaft to prevent ore cars from jumping off the track. A railroad tie is placed across the tracks with one of these springs at each end. When an ore car hits the railroad tie, the springs compress and bring the car to a safe stop. The spring was coiled cold on a lathe at Betts Spring Company in San Leandro,
springmaking resume
where I worked for a while. Six springs were made, of which four were shipped to the customer and one destroyed in testing. Thirty tons of load failed to set it solid. If you talk to Betts, they may tell you they still have someone who's crazy enough to coil this spring cold. I could be wrong, but frankly I doubt it.
Company Services
Company Services
The four large rollers on the front of the machine work in pairs and force the wire through the wire guide tubes towards the coiling points as shown in the blown up picture on the right. There are two grooved coiling points, one vertical and one horizontal from the right hand side of the machine which are positioned round a half round mandrel. The four large wire feeders force the wire through the coiling points which in turn force the wire round the mandrel thus giving you the required spring coils. The number of coils can be adjusted by the amount of wire feed and the pitch spacing and the free length of the spring is governed by the spacing tool just visible on the right hand picture at the twenty past position. When the spring is finished being coiled it is cut of by the cutting tool showing on the left. For the smaller batch sizes and particularly when using thicker wire sizes we use the semi automatic Maxi Coil machines. These have the advantage of being set up very quickly and although the springs are coiled one at once, they are automatic in the sense that all the coiling operations are controlled by compressed air. The Maxi coil basically comprises of a large chuck in which various sizes of mandrel are fitted depending on the the required diameter of the spring. There is then a large travelling attachment to which is fastened the wire feed tool and the compressed air spacer. The wire is fed under the plate shown at the front of the machine and is passed under a peg fastened to the chuck. When the chuck is set in motion by depressing the front handle, the wire is pulled round the mandrel thereby forming a spring. The pitch is applied by the spacer at the back of the traveller which automatically comes
Company Services
out on its own powered by compressed air and then returns when the required number of coils have been turned. The spring is then cut off and the procedure repeated for the next spring. Although this takes more time than automatic coiling, its advantage lies in the very quick setting up time required. Small batches of springs can be set up, coiled and finished while an automatic is still being set up. When really small quantities of springs are required in reasonably small wire sizes, then Carlson hand coilers are used. These coilers work in a similar way to the maxi coilers but are only very small machines and depend on the operator turning a handle to produce the springs and the pitch is applied mechanically, not by compressed air. Again we have a chuck and mandrel arrangement with a peg for catching the wire. The wire is fed in through a tube as can be seen on the right hand picture. The handle is manually turned and again the wire is formed round the mandrel. This time however the pitch and length is obtained by the traveller resting on the long angled bar at the front of the machine which pushes the traveller thus giving the spring a pitch equal to the angle that the bar is set, so the greater the angle the longer the spring. Which ever method is used to produce compression springs, the last operation is common to all of them and that is the flattening of the ends so that they will stand up straight and square. In the majority of cases this grinding flat of the ends is done on an automatic grinding machine as pictured below. These machines consist of a round plate into which bushes are fitted. The bushesinside diameter is of a size so that the springs will fit leaving a small amount of spring protruding top and bottom. The plate then turns slowly round so that the bushes plus springs pass in between either one pair of grinding wheels or as in the illustrated photograph, two pairs of grinding wheels depending on what type of machine is used. the grinding wheels grind the ends of the springs flat and square and then they drop into a waiting box for inspection when they are thoroughly tested to make sure they comply both dimensionally and in their load requirements. This is a very simplified insight into the manufacture of compression springs to try and give you at least some idea of how springs are made. It takes, however, many years to become a competent fully qualified spring maker. If you have any questions regarding spring making do not hesitate to contact us at our email address.
The HTML version of this document (http://home.earthlink.net/~bazillion/intro.html) was written and illustrated by Dave Silberstein, who holds and retains the full copyright.
Page 1 of 62
Second, before you start to work with spring wire, read the section on safety. When you have read that section, read it again. No kidding. And third, about this document: I've tried to write for the benefit of someone who has (or can gain access to) basic hand and power tools. The sections of the document are arranged in logical order presuming a minimal knowledge of the metalworking trades in general or of springmaking in particular, and cross-linked to provide a forward path that leads from this point through the entire manufacturing process. There's a glossary of spring terminology, which should help you to define terms and find additional resources. Where possible, I've indicated where to find additional information in the main body of the text. Any comments or suggestions for improvement should be made to bazillion@earthlink.net.
INTRODUCTION
This section will give you some basic information about springs, what they look like, what their parts are, and how they work. If you already know about springs and want to get right to it, be my guest. There are three basic types of springs: Compression springs can be found in ballpoint pens, pogo sticks, and the valve assemblies of gasoline engines. When you put a load on the spring, making it shorter, it pushes back against the load and tries to get back to its original length. Extension springs are found in garage door assemblies, vise-grip pliers, and carburetors. They are attached at both ends, and when the things they are attached to move apart, the spring tries to bring them together again. Torsion springs can be found on clipboards, underneath swing-down tailgates, and, again, in car engines. The ends of torsion springs are attached to other things, and when those things rotate around the center of the spring, the spring tries to push them back to their original position. See the Glossary for detailed diagrams of these types of springs.
Page 2 of 62
SPRING DESIGN
If you're trying to make a spring to replace a broken one, you don't need to know a whole lot about design. On the other hand, if you're making a prototype of a machine, for instance, and you don't know exactly what you want, then this book is for you. Here you'll learn some basic data about spring design, which is what you'll need to know to make exactly the spring you want.
General Principles
There are three basic principles in spring design: The heavier the wire, the stronger the spring. The smaller the coil, the stronger the spring. The more active coils, the less load you will have to apply in order to get it to move a certain distance.
Based on these general principles, you now know what to do to change the properties of a spring you already have. For instance, if you want to make automotive valve springs a little stronger than stock, you can a) go to a slightly heavier wire and keep the dimensions and coil count the same, b) decrease the diameter of the spring, keeping the wire size and coil count the same, or c) decrease the number of active coils, keeping the wire size and spring diameter the same. Naturally, you can also go to a stronger material to achieve the same result. Now, what if you're making a spring from scratch, with nothing to go on in the way of a sample? You can engineer your own design (see the next chapter for the math), coil a spring, and then test it. If it's what you want, fine. If it's, let's say, a skosh too strong, then you can a) go to a lighter wire, b) open up the coil diameter, or c) increase the number of active coils to get a slightly weaker spring. Or, if you want to make things really simple, go to http://home.earthlink.net/~bazillion/resources.html, where you'll find a few websites that offer online design!
Page 3 of 62
Mathematics
Naturally, spring design software is available -- you can find out where to get it at http://home.earthlink.net/~bazillion/resources.html. For the purists (or those who don't want to pay for a program), here's a very short summary of the mathematics of spring design. These equations, by the way, are taken from The New American Machinist's Handbook, published by McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.in 1955. I don't pretend to understand them.
There's a lot more in the way of engineering that goes into spring design: these are only the basic equations. If you're interested, you can contact someone who makes spring design software or (gasp!) find it in the library under Dewey classification number 621.824. You can also contact the Spring Manufacturers' Institute (info@smihq.org): they make a handy-dandy spring calculator, suitable for simple design work, that anyone can learn to use. They also have spring design software, training classes, and a bunch more stuff. Dave sez, "Check it out."
Design Limitations
Depending on what kind of spring you want to design, and depending on where it will be used, your design will be limited: For all springs: A spring under load is stressed. If you put too much stress on a spring, its shape will deform and it will not return to its original dimensions. The material from which the spring is made will have an effect on the strength of the spring: it will also have an effect on how much stress the spring will withstand. The section on spring materials will tell you more about this. When you heat spring wire (which you always do), it may change its dimensions. Again, the section on materials will tell you more about this.
Page 4 of 62
For compression springs: If the spring will set solid (compress all the way, so that all the coils touch each other) at the limit of its travel, the diameter of the wire times the number of coils cannot be greater than the space allowed, unless you want the spring itself to act as a mechanical stop to the motion. Springs that operate in a high-temperature environment (like for instance inside an engine) will need to be made slightly longer to compensate for the fact that the heat may have an effect on the length of the spring. The section on finishing will tell you more about this. As a compression spring assumes a load and shortens, the diameter of the active coils will increase. This is only a problem when the spring has to work in a confined space.
For extension springs: There should be some mechanical limit on how far the spring will extend, or the spring will lose its shape and not return to its initial condition with all coils closed. Extension springs operating in a high-temperature environment may have to be coiled extra-tight, as the heat will tend to weaken the spring. The section on extension springs will tell you more about this.
For torsion springs: When a torsion springs assumes a load, the diameter of the coil body will decrease. If the spring has something inside the coil, it will act as a mechanical stop to the action of the spring.
Buying Design
If you want to have a mechanical engineer design your spring, your best bet is to call a spring shop. You can find spring shops in the phone book. If your phone book doesn't list any, go to the library: they should have phone books for major cities where spring factories are -- try Detroit or Los Angeles if there are none in your area. A spring shop will generally do the design work for you for a small charge. They will also try to get you to let them make the spring for you, which you may or may not want. The section on spring shops will tell you more about how their business operates. http://home.earthlink.net/~bazillion/resources.html will give you links to spring shops, suppliers, people who make spring design software, and a whole slew of other stuff.
Page 5 of 62
SPRING MATERIALS
This section will tell you about the different kinds of material that springs are made out of. It will also tell you where to get your wire -- make sure you read the Safety section so you know how to handle it safely once you've got it.
Types of Wire
Springs are usually made from alloys of steel. The most common spring steels are music wire, oil tempered wire, chrome silicon, chrome vanadium, and 302 and 17-7 stainless. Other materials can also be formed into springs, depending on the characteristics needed. Some of the more common of these exotic metals include beryllium copper, phosphor bronze, Inconel, Monel, and titanium. The following table summarizes the more important properties of each material: Material Music Wire Common Sizes .003-.250" 0.08-6mm Properties and Uses A high-carbon steel wire used primarily for applications demanding high strength, medium price, and uniformly high quality. Guitar and piano strings are made from this material, as are most small springs. Music wire will contract under heat, and can be plated. This is the workhorse steel spring wire, being used for many applications in which superior strength or uniformity is not crucial. Will not generally change dimensions under heat. Can be plated. Also available in square and rectangular sections. These are higher quality, higher strength versions of Oil Tempered wire, used in high-temperature applications such as automotive valve springs. Will not generally change dimensions under heat. Can be plated. Stainless steels will not rust, making them ideal for the food industry and other environments containing water or steam. 302 series stainless will expand slightly under heat: 17-7 will usually not change. Cannot be plated. These specialty alloys are sometimes made into springs which are designed to work in extremely high-temperature environments, where magnetic fields present a problem, or where corrosion resistance is needed in a high-temperature working environment. They are much more costly than the more common stocks and cannot be plated. Generally will not change dimensions under heat.
.010-.625" 0.25-16mm
.010-.500" 0.12-13mm
Stainless Steel
.005-.500" 0.125-13mm
.010-.125" 0.25-3mm
Page 6 of 62
Titanium
.032-.500" 0.8-13mm
Used primarily in air- and spacecraft because of its extremely light weight and high strength, titanium is also extremely expensive and dangerous to work with as well: titanium wire will shatter explosively under stress if its surface is scored. Generally will not change dimensions under heat. Cannot be plated.
Titanium is the strongest material, but it is very expensive. Next come chrome vanadium and chrome silicon, then music wire, and then oil tempered wire. The stainless and exotic materials are all weaker than the rest.
Buying wire
Spring wire is made in common sizes (see table above) and in special sizes to order. The common sizes that are manufactured are available within the ranges specified at intervals ranging from a couple of thousandths of an inch (for the smaller sizes) to sixteenths of inches (for the larger sizes). Metric-measure sizes are available outside the US. These spring wire materials may be bought from steel suppliers in two forms: coils and straightened-and-cut bars. Unless you are dealing with extremely close tolerances, exotic materials, or need a stock size that is not commonly manufactured, you'll probably find it most economical to buy your stock in coils. Bought in coils, spring steel is generally sold by the pound: the coils range in size from about 6 inches (for wire under .005") to 7 feet (for wire in the .437-.500" range) in diameter. The smaller coils are generally shipped UPS, while the larger sizes require truck transport as well as special unloading and storage facilities. Finding a source of supply is as easy as looking in the phone book: if you're in a rural area, try the local library which will have Yellow Pages for the major metropolitan areas -- try Detroit or Los Angeles for starters. You can also contact the Spring Manufacturers' Institute (http://www.smihq.org) and ask them for a copy of Springs magazine, which is filled with suppliers' advertisements (as well as technically interesting articles). http://home.earthlink.net/~bazillion/resources.html also lists some wire manufacturers and suppliers. One caution: you should not order straightened-and-cut wire until you're SURE you know what you want. Once you get your material, you'll find it impossible to return if the bars are an inch too short. And one note: when spring wire is made, it develops what's known as a "cast" from being tied into round coils. If you strip wire from a coil, it will likely not be perfectly straight: the "natural" curvature of the wire is "cast". The cast of the wire will introduce an extremely small variance in the physical dimensions of the springs made from the wire -- it's only a problem when you're working with very close dimensional tolerances. Cast is why wire is also available in straightened-and-cut bars.
Page 7 of 62
General Safety
Springs under load want to return to their original shape. The same goes for spring wire. Spring wire will try to straighten itself out if given the chance: don't let your body get in its way. Small wire Small wire (diameter less than about .025") will not hurt you if it hits you. On the other hand, small wire is nothing more than an edge, waiting for something to cut. Don't use your hand to try to stop wire that's moving, especially if it's moving under power (like being pulled by a lathe). Instead, wait till it stops moving. Gloves are an excellent idea, too. Medium wire Medium wire (diameter from about .025" - .312") is too wide to act as an edge, and usually not massive enough to break bones, but it can raise quite a knot if you get in its way. Again, always keep track of where the ends of the wire are, and if they start to move, get out of the way. Heavy wire Heavy wire (diameter greater than about .312") needs respect. If it gets loose, it can EASILY break bones, or worse. Stainless steel Stainless steel is a lot softer than other types of wire. When cut, the end of the wire is like a knife edge. Always keep track of where the end of the wire is, and keep your hands away from it while it's moving.
Handling Wire
The two most dangerous times are when you're breaking open a coil of wire and when you're actually winding a spring. Breaking open coils Once you have your wire, you'll need to take it out of its coil. The coil may be wrapped in paper -- take that off first. Under the paper, the wire will be tied. Light wire will be tied with string. Medium wire will How to make Springs Page 8 of 62
be tied with tie wire. Large wire will be tied with metal bands. Whatever size wire you have, remember that the coil should have only two ends. One will be on the inside of the coil, and the other will be on the outside. You'll normally use wire from the inside, to avoid tangling. Always make a hook on the "inside" end so it's easy to find again:
To break open a coil of small (up to about .125") wire, cut all the ties except two. Don't cut the closest tie holding the outside end of the wire, and the tie most directly opposite to that one. To remove wire from the coil, start with the end on the inside of the coil: this will keep the coil from tangling. Grab the end of the wire and cut off the hook. Pull it slightly, until you can see the gap between it and the rest of the coil. Grab the wire at the gap and pull the end free from the tie holding it. Repeat this process, working around the coil, until you have the length you need.
Medium-sized wire
(.125 - .312") can be handled the same way, except that you should keep three ties instead of two. When uncoiling wire larger than .250", you should lay the coil flat on the ground and always stand in the center of the coil, for safety.
Large wire
(.312 - .625") needs special handling. First of all, you'll probably be using a hoist or forklift to move the coil, because of the weight. Lay the coil on top of something (a 2x4 or a pipe works great) to keep one end off the ground so that you can pick it up when you're done. Stand inside the coil from now on! Then, take a length of tie wire and double it over. Loop it twice around the coil, right next to the second tie holding the inside end of the wire. Pull it tight and twist it so that you have a "pigtail" and the tie wire is too tight to move by hand. Then, cut the first two original ties. Grab the end of the wire and flip it over the coil, so that it sticks out.
Go to the next tie and repeat this process, working your way around the coil until you have the length you need. You can use heavy bolt cutters or an acetylene torch to cut the wire. If heavy wire gets away from you and starts to come undone all by itself, the very best thing to do is Run like hell, and Pray it doesn't hit you.
Page 9 of 62
Coiling
If you're using a lathe to make your springs, you'll be standing there, letting the lathe pull the wire. The lathe will do what you want, but it will not know to stop if things get out of control. So, before you start the lathe, figure out what you're going to do if things go haywire. Know how to stop the lathe, and know which way you can safely run. Never reach over the wire to get to your lathe controls, especially when working with heavy wire. Reach under it and avoid injury if your wire guide breaks. Keep the lathe speed DEAD SLOW: with heavy wire, 10 rpm is about right. Don't grab onto wire that's being fed into the lathe. Stop the lathe and back it off until there's no tension in the wire before you put your hands near. NEVER try to guide wire by hand. Use tooling.
Lastly, make a hook in the "inside" end of the wire, so you can find it again easily when you need to.
Storing Wire
Safety first: always store your wire someplace where kids can't get at it. Common sense second: keep your wire dry. Steel wire will rust if it gets wet. More common sense: keep your wire tight. When you're finished working with a coil of wire, make a hook in the inside end (so you can find it again easily) and tie the coil securely. Be especially careful with heavy wire, which should be tied with at least six doubled strands of tie wire, each looped around the coil twice and cinched tight. Still more common sense: if you live in an area that has earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes, etc., be sure that you chock your coils of wire so that they don't get loose and start to move around when mother nature starts acting up.
Page 10 of 62
EQUIPMENT
This section will tell you what equipment you will need to make springs.
Winding Machines
The basic thing you'll need is a winding machine of some sort. A winding machine is something that will pull your wire around and make it coil up into a spring shape. What kind of winding machine you'll need depends on what size wire you'll be working with, and also, how many springs you want to make. If you want to make more than about 50 springs of one kind, it'll probably be worth your while to have your springs made commercially. You can find out about how spring factories operate: http://home.earthlink.net/~bazillion/resources.html also has a list of spring shops that have a Web presence. You can also find spring shops in your area by consulting the phone book. Light Wire For light wire (.003-.025") extension springs, you can use a hand drill mounted in a vise. A variable-speed drill is best: set it on the lowest speed you can. For light wire torsion springs (up to about .125"), you can use a hand winder:
For light wire compression springs and for medium wire (.025-.187") springs of all types, you should have a lathe. For wire bigger than about .187", you'll need a lathe strong enough to pull the wire: for compression springs in all sizes of wire, your lathe should have a back gear and a working lead screw. Your lathe doesn't have to be a precision machine. In fact, the heavier the wire you want to work with, the better it is if your lathe is a piece of junk. All it has to have is a working motor, a tool post (for compression and torsion springs), and a reliable back gear, and, also for compression springs, a variable-pitch lead screw. Other than that, it can be as sloppy as you want. Wood lathes, by the way, may work for light extension springs if the tooling can be made to fit.
Grinding Equipment
You'll need a grinding wheel for several purposes. The best kind is a double wheel, How to make Springs Page 11 of 62
where you can have a grinding wheel in one side and a cutoff wheel on the other. Metal trades suppliers can sell you the wheels. For all springs, you'll have to be able to cut away the waste wire from the ends of your springs. You can do this with wire cutters (for wire up to about .062"), with a cutoff wheel, or with an acetylene torch. (One note: an acetylene torch will not be effective on large-diameter stainless steel wire.) For compression springs, you may want to have the ends ground square with respect to the body of the spring. You can do this with an abrasive wheel. For heavy compression springs, you may need a bigger grinder: a small grinder will take forever. Also for compression springs, you may want to deburr the inside and outside of the ends after grinding. You can do this with a conical grinding stone mounted in a drill (for the inside) and a regular abrasive wheel (for the outside). You'll also need a grinding wheel to make some of your tooling: most of the tooling you'll need can be made rough, and a grinding wheel will work just fine.
Finishing Equipment
After you've wound your springs and formed the ends, you'll need to get rid of the stress that bending the wire has caused. To do this, you need an oven. How hot your oven needs to go depends on what material you use for your spring: Oil tempered wire, music wire, and 302 stainless 17-7 stainless and chrome silicon Chrome vanadium Most exotic materials 500F 650F 750F 850F 260C 340C 400C 450C
It's probably best not to use your kitchen oven for oil tempered wire, chrome silicon, or chrome vanadium. The wire will come coated with oil, which will burn off in the oven. If your oven won't reach the temperature you need, find a potter who has a kiln you can use. For stainless steel wire, you'll also need a passivating tank to remove the chemical coating on the wire. This is a tank made out of stainless steel (an old sink is fine) and filled with acid. If you want your springs to be plated, send them out to a plating shop. Don't try to do your own plating unless you're already in the plating business.
Page 12 of 62
Hand Tools
You'll need some basic hand tools: A vise (either floor- or bench-mounted) Wire cutters (6" diagonal) Needle-nose pliers Calipers (if dimensions are critical) Tape measure (if dimensions are rough) Crescent wrench Acetylene torch (if working with wire over about .250") Bolt cutters (for wire between .080-.250") Round nose pliers (for forming the ends of torsion springs) Chalk
Testing Equipment
Depending on what kind of machine your spring is going to work in, probably the best way to test a spring is to make one and see if it does the job. Other than that, here are a few ways to perform rough testing on springs. To test extension springs, you can always hang the spring from the ceiling and load it up with weights on the other end. For medium-sized compression springs, you can made the spring act as a limited-travel extension spring (see extension springs for how to do this) and test them the same way. This method will not work for light or heavy compression springs -- just medium ones. I don't know of a simple way to make a really accurate testing rig for torsion springs: best bet is to just plug it in and see if it works.
Tooling Stock
To make the tooling you need, you should have some pieces of flat stock (mild steel) and some bar stock. You'll get the idea of what kind of stock you'll need for your tooling as you read the section on tooling. You can find this kind of stuff at your local scrap dealer or junkyard: they usually sell it by the pound. You'll also need arbor stock (an arbor is the bar or pipe you use to wrap the wire around to make the spring). Once you know what size arbor you need, visit your local scrap yard: it doesn't have to be pretty, but remember, it does have to be long enough. If you're working with heavy wire, you may need a welding rig to make your tooling safe.
Page 13 of 62
TOOLING
The whole purpose of tooling is to keep the wire under control while you make your springs. The important parts of the wire to keep under control are the two ends. This section will tell you how to make the tooling you'll need to keep the ends of your wire under control: The important parts of the wire that you want to keep under control are the two ends: The front end -- the part of the wire that you use to begin coiling, and The back end -- the part of the wire that is last to be coiled, or that most closely approximates that condition.
For heavier wire, you'll need to make a pickup pin to keep the front end under control. A pickup pin can be made from a square bar, using a grinding wheel: Notice how the pickup pin has been ground to accommodate both the arbor and the wire. It's better not to use a three-jaw chuck for heavier wire, but if there's no alternative, you can control the front end of the wire be either drilling a hole in one of the jaws of the chuck and press-fitting a pickup pin into it, or welding a pickup pin onto one of the jaws. Again, it's much safer to use a four-jaw chuck. 'Nuff said.
Page 14 of 62
Extension and torsion springs: For wire up to about .125", you can make a simple wire guide that looks like this:
For larger wire, you'll need to make a wire guide that fits into the tool post of your lathe:
If the spring you want to make is longer than your lathe, you will need to make some special tooling. Write to me (bazillion@earthlink.net) and I'll tell you how.
Page 15 of 62
Finishing Tooling
You'll also need to make tools to help you finish the ends of extension and torsion springs. Again, the tooling you'll need will depend on the size of your wire.
Extension springs: Most often, the ends of extension springs are formed like either loops or hooks. To form these you will need two tools: the first is a set of looping plates, which can be made out of flat steel with a grinder. To make looping plates, first take two pieces of stock (1/4" thick, width about 11/2 times the outside diameter of your spring ) and chuck them up in a vise, one at a time. Bend the ends to about 100 degrees. Then, cut off all but a small amount of the end that you bent over:
Using the grinding wheel, carve out a hollow in each end. Taper it down so that the edge is sharp enough to "grab" between two coils of wire. These plates work best with relatively stiff extension springs. If you find you're having trouble keeping the body of the spring steady between the plates, you can always cut some grooves on the inside face of the plates to help the wire stay put. Also note that the sloped area that's been ground away at the top of each plate is somewhat larger than the diameter of the spring.
The second tool you'll need to form the ends of extension springs is a hooking rod: again, you can use your grinding wheel to make this tool. This is a hand-held tool that you'll need a fair degree of control over, so make it about 6-14" long (depending on the size of the spring wire) out of stick that's about a third again as thick as the wire you're coiling. Notice that the end is relieved to accommodate the wire. Extended hooks: You may want to make an extension spring with extended hooks, like this:
The best way to do this is to coil the spring as if it were a torsion spring and then bend the ends over to form the extended hooks (see the chapter on torsion springs).
Page 16 of 62
If you're making this kind of spring, you'll need to make a different set of plates. The first will be a thin steel plate with one edge ground knifesharp. For the other plate, take a piece of flat steel and bend it over just like you did for the looping plates, only bend it over a little more and don't trim quite so much off the end: You might also want to make a bending pipe to aid in bending wire larger than can easily be bent by hand. Start with a short section of pipe or tubing that's a little bigger on the inside than your wire. Then, simply cut off the end on a diagonal, like this:
See the section on extension springs for how to use the plates and the bending pipe to form your ends.
Torsion springs: The ends of torsion springs can be formed in a million different ways. The key is to make the bends smooth: the sharper the bend, the more likely it'll break: If you're using light wire, you can probably use round-nose pliers to form your ends. For medium wire, make a layover plate (above) and use a length of pipe to grab the end of the wire. This will give you enough leverage to get it to bend For wire too big to bend by hand, just heat the bend area of the wire with your acetylene torch. Don't get it too hot --just warm it up enough so that it will bend with the help of a piece of pipe.
Page 17 of 62
Bending jigs
This is the simplest bending jig I know of: it uses tooling you've already made! In your vise, chuck up a piece of bar stock, maybe a little smaller than your arbor, and a pickup pin suitable for the wire you're using. Then, when you lay the leg of your spring between the bar stock and the pickup pin, you can use a wire guide to made the leg bend around the bar stock. Keeping careful track of how much wire is used up making the bend will allow you to make your bends fairly precisely - with practice, within 1/10". You can also make a more complex bending jig capable of handling virtually any light wire bend:
You can make stops and guides mounted on top of the jig (to control your spring) out of thin steel, and other stops mounted on the side of the jig out of thicker stock -- 1/8" works well -- to control how far the handle should move (to control the amount of bend).
Page 18 of 62
Passivating basket
If you're working with stainless steel wire, you'll need a passivating basket. All a passivating basket has to do is hold the springs while they're taking a bath in some nice acid. You can make one very easily using stainless steel mesh. Just bend the edges of the mesh up to form a basket shape large enough to hold your springs, "stitch" the edges together with stainless steel wire, and make a handle, also out of stainless steel. Don't use anything but stainless to make your passivating basket -- otherwise, the acid will eat it alive.
Grinding stage
A grinding stage is simply a flat piece of material (either steel or wood will work) attached to your grinder. The purpose of a grinding stage is to provide a flat surface that your spring lays on while you're grinding the ends. Make your stage so that it faces the flat side of the grinding wheel, and is at least as wide as the grinding wheel's side surface.
Page 19 of 62
The Arbor
Making springs by hand basically consists of bending wire around a rod called an arbor or mandrel. The arbor is secured in the chuck of a winding machine (typically either a drill, a hand winder, or a lathe). This section will tell you how to get the right diameter arbor, but it's also important to get the right length. Correct arbor length is important because it's difficult (not impossible, but difficult) to coil a spring on an arbor that's not long enough. Here's how to figure out how long your arbor has to be. 1. Estimate the amount of arbor you'll need to accommodate the spring itself. Know that spring wire wound on an arbor will take up more space than the same spring will after it's off the arbor. How much more depends on the number of coils and the size of the wire. Generally, the more coils in the spring, the more it will contract after coiling. Also generally, the smaller the wire, the more space it will take up on the arbor. And lastly, the larger the arbor, the more room you'll need to accommodate your spring while coiling. A couple of examples might help with all this: A heavy torsion spring with 5 coils will generally not uncoil more than about 1/2 a coil after winding. Giving yourself as much slack as you can, your arbor might be 6-8" longer than the spring, plus whatever length you need to chuck it up. A similar torsion spring made from very light wire (same diameter arbor) will lose more coils, and take up more room on the arbor when coiling. Because it's short to begin with, though, the 6-8" addition to the arbor length should still be okay. A long extension spring (like on a screen door) should be wound on an arbor at least a foot longer than the spring itself, again plus whatever you need for the chuck.
2. Add in the amount of arbor you'll need to secure it safely in the chuck. 3. Add in a fudge factor -- 10% will do -- just for the heck of it.
Page 20 of 62
Remember that your arbor should be at least the length you figure out here: there's no real maximum length until your winding machine won't support the weight.
Page 21 of 62
7. READ THIS STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE DOING IT! When your setup is done, go ahead and turn on the drill. Keep the speed LOW, and keep your finger on the trigger. All you want to do is make a few coils, to check the diameter. As the arbor starts to turn, two things will happen. The wire guide will "kick" upward: you can steady it with your right hand. It will also try to slide away to your right: let it slide for an inch or so, and then move your right hand to the left until the coils of wire lie flat against each other. What you're looking for is this: Stop the drill before the "back" end of the wire reaches the pin in the wire guide. The gap in the diagram, by the way, is a good thing. If you see it while the coils are laying down, that means the coils will be tight up against each other when you're done. (In an extension spring, how tight the coils are is called "initial tension". There's more info on this on the extension spring chapter.) 8. Reverse the drill SLOWLY until the coils hang free on the arbor. If you can't reverse the drill, you can grab the coils tight near the chuck and pull the dogleg out of the chuck. Loosen your grip on the coils slowly and let them unwind themselves until they're not under any tension. Then let go. 9. Slide the wire guide and the coils off the arbor. Check the diameter of the coils and see how close you are to what you want. Remember, if you need an exact diameter, the size of the coil may change when you relieve the stress in the spring. See the chapter on finishing techniques for information on this. 10. If the diameter is not what you want, go to a different size arbor, repeating steps 2-9 until the arbor is the right size. That's it. If you're using a hand winder: 1. First, make sure that your hand winder is mounted solidly. Mount it in a vise, or bolt it onto a workbench. Mount your hand winder so that the handle is to your left and the chuck is in front of your left shoulder. 2. Next, chuck up your arbor. The diameter of the arbor should be a little less than the inside diameter of the spring you want to make. 3. Get a piece of wire maybe a couple of feet long. Cut it off from the coil and make a 90-degree bend in one end, giving you a dogleg end about an inch long. 4. Put your wire guide onto the arbor. Hold it with your right hand and position it an inch or so away from the chuck. 5. Stick the dogleg end of your wire between the two topmost jaws of the drill chuck. Shove it in as far as the bend in the wire.
Page 22 of 62
6. Bring the wire guide near enough for the wire to catch in the groove in the pin. Keep the wire guide away from the chuck. At this point, your setup should look something like this:
7. When your setup is done, go ahead and start turning the handle. Turn it so that the TOP of the chuck moves AWAY from you.
As the arbor starts to turn, two things will happen. The wire guide will press upward: you can steady it with your right hand. It will also try to slide away to your right: let it slide for an inch or so, and then move your right hand to the left until the coils of wire lie flat against each other. What you're looking for is this: Stop turning the handle when you have three or more complete coils side by side on the arbor. The gap in the diagram, by the way, is a good thing. If you see it while the coils are laying down, that means the coils will be tight up against each other when you're done. (In an extension spring, how tight the coils are is called "initial tension". There's more info on this on the extension spring chapter.) 8. Turn the handle the other way SLOWLY until the coils hang free on the arbor. Don't unwind so far that one of the jaws of the chuck catches the wire dogleg and starts to unwind the spring for you! 9. Slide the wire guide and the coils off the arbor. Check the diameter of the coils and see how close you are to what you want. Remember, if you need an exact diameter, the size of the coil may change when you relieve the stress in the spring. See the chapter on finishing techniques for information on this. 10. If the diameter is not what you want, change your arbor, repeating steps 2-9 until the spring is the right size. That's it.
Page 23 of 62
If you're using a lathe: 1. If this is the first time you're using the lathe, make sure you're familiar with it. Know how to stop the dang thing before you turn it on! Also, make sure you have a clear space around you (common sense). 2. Next, chuck up your arbor. The diameter of the arbor should be a little less than the inside diameter of the spring you want to make. 3. If you're using a four-jaw chuck, you'll have to center your arbor. Do this by turning on the lathe and holding a piece of chalk in your hand, right next to the tool post. Move your hand slowly towards the arbor until the chalk leaves a mark. Then, stop the lathe and adjust the jaws of the chuck so that the arbor moves away from the mark. Tighten the jaws and do this again, until the arbor is close to being centered (it doesn't have to be exact). Next, back off one of the jaws of the chuck and put your pickup pin between the jaw and the arbor. Let it stick out past the end of the jaw about twice the diameter of the wire you'll be using (see the diagram below). 4. What type of wire guide you use depends on how heavy your wire is. For medium and light wire, you can use the same type of guide as for a hand winder or drill: for heavy wire (over about ¼"), use a tool post-mounted wire guide. If you're using light wire, you can read the directions for this step as if you were using a hand winder (above). Otherwise, complete this step as below. Put your wire guide into the tool post. It should be positioned just a little under the top of the arbor. With small wire, the distance between the arbor and the wire guide should be fairly close; for medium wire, 3-6"; for heavy wire, 6-12". The groove in your wire guide should also be fairly close to the tool post: the heavier the wire, the closer it should be. Cinch the wire guide down TIGHT. This is what your setup should look like edge-on from where you're standing:
Note the horizontal clearance between the right end of the pickup pin and the left end of the wire guide. 5. Get a piece of wire a few feet long (the heavier the wire, the longer the piece: also, the bigger the arbor, the longer the piece). Cut it off from the coil.
Page 24 of 62
6. Position the pickup pin of the lathe at the top of the chuck and thread your wire UNDER the wire guide, OVER the arbor, and UNDER the pickup pin. At this point, your setup should look something like this:
7. READ THIS STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE DOING IT! Before you start the lathe, make sure you have one hand on the motor control and the other on the lead screw lever. (If you're coiling without a lead screw, see the section on compression springs on how to control the motion of the tool post as you coil.) Reach UNDER the wire with this hand, so that if the wire guide breaks, the wire will not snap upwards and catch you in the armpit. Start the lathe DEAD SLOW so that the TOP of the chuck moves AWAY from you. Keep the tool post steady and watch the "front" end of the wire as it comes around. It should clear the ways and the wire guide. As the arbor starts to turn, the wire will close up on itself. Keep the tool post steady until a small gap appears in the coils, like this.
When this gap appears, let the tool post move slowly to the right and continue coiling until you have about three full coils side by side on the arbor: 8. Stop the lathe and run it backwards SLOWLY until the coils hang free on the arbor. Don't let the "front" end of the wire catch on the jaws of the chuck as they come around.
Page 25 of 62
9. Slide the coils off the arbor and check the diameter to see how close you are to what you want. Remember, if you need an exact diameter, the size of the coil may change when you relieve the stress in the spring. See the chapter on finishing techniques for information on this. 10. If the diameter is not what you want, change your arbor, repeating steps 2-9 until it's the right size. That's it.
Left-Handed Springs
There's one more little oddity you should know about: torsion springs come left-handed and right-handed:
Depending on what you want your spring to do, you may need one or the other, or both. The setups described above tell you how to set up for a right-handed spring. If you want to make a left-handed spring, you'll need to make a left-handed setup because a righthanded setup will not work for a left-handed spring! Left-Handed Spring Setup Everything you read about setups for right-handed springs is exactly the same for lefthanded springs, except for two things. When winding a left-handed spring: 1. The wire will travel OVER the pin on the wire guide, UNDER the arbor, and OVER the pickup pin. 2. The top of the chuck will be going TOWARD you as you make your coils. The basic setup for a tool post-mounted wire guide will look like this:
The only tooling modification you'll need is if you're using a hand-held wire guide: the guide pin will need to stick out in the opposite direction from what was shown above. The only difference this will make is that your first coil count will be somewhat of a guess, because you won't be able to see when the gap passes bottom dead center of How to make Springs Page 26 of 62
the arbor. On your second trial spring, though, you should be able to correct this exactly with your chalk mark.
Page 27 of 62
TORSION SPRINGS
This chapter will tell you how to make torsion springs. Before you start, read the section on The Setup, and have your setup done (spring coil diameter correct). Don't forget that torsion springs come left-handed and right-handed. Be sure to make your setup for the correct hand. If you're making a left-handed spring, remember that the setup and the motion of the chuck and arbor will be OPPOSITE to what is described.
Wire length
When you're ready to start coiling, the first thing you need to do is figure out how much wire you'll need to make your spring. Here's how: 1. Take the outside diameter of the spring and multiply it by 3.3. 2. Take the result of this and multiply it by the number of coils in the spring. 3. Figure out about how much wire you'll need to form each end. Allow a couple of inches on each end to grab onto when making your bends. Add those two numbers together. 4. Add together the results from steps 2 and 3. 5. Add in a fudge factor (about 10%, but not less than 6"). 6. Write the result down. If you're WAY off, you can save yourself a lot of wire by cutting it closer. By writing down what you think you'll need, you'll know how much you can change this figure and still have a margin for error. When in doubt, err on the side of safety and plan to use more wire, rather than less.
5. READ THE NEXT STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE YOU START IT. Start your coiling. Move the chuck DEAD SLOW until you have completed your first full coil. When you have your first coil laid down on the arbor, you'll then need to do two things at the same time. 1. First, bring the wire guide a little to the left. You want there to be a gap between the first two coils as the wire lays down on the arbor, but you don't want the gap to be big. In fact, the smaller, the better, as long as it's always there. The gap should look like this:
2. Second, start counting your coils. Count "one" each time the pickup pin passes top dead center. Stop winding when you've wound one coil MORE than your spring should have when finished, or when you run out of wire. DON'T LET THE "BACK" END OF THE WIRE PASS THE PIN ON THE WIRE GUIDE! 6. When you've stopped coiling, mark the top of the chuck with a chalk line, and write (on the chuck) the final coil count. You can rig up a pointer out of tie wire that will indicate when the chuck reaches the exact stopping point as marked by the line.
Page 29 of 62
7. Back off the chuck SLOWLY until the spring is loose on the arbor. Don't let the pickup pin or one of the jaws of the chuck catch on the front end of the wire and start to "unwind" your spring! When the spring is loose, slide it off the arbor and cut the excess off the "back" end, leaving yourself what you need to form the longer of the two ends. 8. Put your spring into the oven and relieve the stress. For this trial, you can leave it in the oven for half an hour: all you want to do is make sure you have the right diameter. The process of baking out the stress in the wire may change the dimensions of your spring. Stainless steel coils will generally expand slightly when heated: music wire coils will generally contract slightly. When you've finished this process, let the spring air-dry and measure it to see how close you came to what you want. Check the diameter first. If it's not OK, don't bother going any further: you'll need a different arbor, which will change all the rest of your dimensions. If the diameter is OK, count the number of coils in your spring. You should be pretty close: if you're only making one or two springs, being an eighth of a coil off either way is OK -- you can always strip out or add a small amount of coil by hand. If you're more than an eighth of a coil off, figure out how much more or less you need and change the chalk mark on your chuck so that the next time you wind a spring, you can stop coiling at the right spot. Lastly, look at the coils themselves. They should all lie flat against each other, all the way out to the ends of the spring body. If you see gaps in the body of the spring, that means that you let the wire guide go too far to the right while you were coiling. If you see a gap at one end (usually the "front" end), that means that when you started coiling, your wire guide was too far to the right of the pickup pin. Finally, set this spring aside to use in setting up for bending the legs. If needed, repeat the coiling process again until you get what you want. At this point, you're ready to begin work on the ends.
Page 30 of 62
A sharp bend may cause the wire to break when a load is placed on the spring. As you figure out how to form your ends, keep this in mind. The best tool to use for light wire is round-nose pliers. Always relieve the stress in your springs again after you form the ends. A second stress relief won't likely change any dimensions, but it will allow the bends in the formed ends to stay in the shape you put them in when they're under load. Easy Bends: Here's a quick way to make torsion spring ends. It's not too precise, but then again, maybe your spring doesn't have to be, either. Find a rod that you can use to make the bend. Try not to have it skinnier than twice the diameter of your wire. Mount the rod in your vise, along with a pickup pin. Put the end of the spring between the pickup pin and the rod. Measure the distance so that when you're done, it comes out right.
Page 31 of 62
Using a wire guide or a bending pipe, bend the end the way you want it. (With very light wire, you can do this by hand.) If the spring slips as you bend the end around, put some pressure on the coil body so that the pickup pin grabs it solidly.
If you're just making a few springs, you can probably get away with doing each one by hand. If you want to make a lot of the same kind of spring, go ahead and make a more sophisticated bending jig -- see the section on tooling for how to do this. Extended hooks If you're making an extension spring with extended hooks, like this:
you'll need to treat the ends as if the spring was a torsion spring. The first step in forming extended hooks is to make sure that the ends of the wire are straight. Having done that, the next step is to lay the ends over. Here's how you do this: 1. Take the narrow plate with the knife edge that you made when you were making tooling and shove it in between the coils of your spring, like this:
2. Put a spacer plate the same size as your wire across the bottom of your spring.
Page 32 of 62
3. Put the layover plate you made across the end of the spring, a little below the center of the coil. At this point, the spring and the three plates should look like this:
4. Chuck the three plates - with the spring, if possible - up in a vise. 5. Using your hand (for light wire) or a pipe (for medium wire), bend the end of the spring down over the bending plate. While you do this, hold the spring down with your other hand so that it doesn't pop off the knife plate. You'll need to bend the wire MORE than 90 degrees to get a 90-degree bend. The two most common bugs that happen when doing this are A) the end comes up outside the coil and B) the end hooks in toward the center of the spring. To fix these errors, A) raise or B) lower the spacer plate. This procedure will give you ends that come straight off the ends of the coil, and from here you should be able to form hooks or loops, as you wish.
Page 33 of 62
EXTENSION SPRINGS
This section will tell you how to make extension springs. (For how to make extended hooks, see the torsion spring chapter.) Once you have your setup done, the first thing you should do is make sure you have enough wire.
Wire Length
If you're using light wire, or if you're making short extension springs with wire up to about .250", you really don't need to know how much wire you need for each spring -just be sure you have more than enough. You can figure a rough length by taking the length of the body of the spring, dividing by the wire size (which gives you an approximate count of the number of coils in the spring) and then multiplying that by 3.3. It'll probably come out too long, but that's okay - you can use your first couple of springs to set up for making your loops. If you want to make long extension springs out of wire over about .250" or if you want more than 50 of one design, I recommend that you go to a spring shop and have them make your springs for you.
Page 34 of 62
3. Start your coiling. Move the chuck DEAD SLOW until you're sure that the wire is seated on the pickup pin and the pin on your wire guide. Let a couple of coils lay down on the arbor. 4. READ THE NEXT STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE YOU START IT. When you have your first coils laid down on the arbor, you'll then need to do two things at the same time. 1. First, bring the wire guide a little to the left. You want there to be a gap between the first two coils as the wire lays down on the arbor, but you don't want the wire to run over itself as the arbor turns. The gap should look something like this:
This gap controls what's called "initial tension". Initial tension is the force in the wire that makes it necessary to apply some load to the spring in order to break the coils apart. Garage door springs, for instance, have a LOT of initial tension. Slinky toys (which are basically extension springs without loops) have very little. 2. Stop winding when the first of these four things happens: 1. You reach the point beyond which you can't reach the "off" switch on your lathe. 2. You run out of wire. DON'T LET THE "BACK" END OF THE WIRE PASS THE PIN ON THE WIRE GUIDE! 3. Your wire guide gets close to the end of your arbor. 4. (if you're just going to make one spring) If the coils on the arbor measure about 1-1/4 times the length of the body of the spring you're trying to make. 5. Back off the chuck so that the spring is loose on the arbor. If you're using light wire, you can just grip the body of the spring near the chuck and pull the dogleg out, loosening your grip slowly so that the coils unwind slowly. Slide the wire guide and the spring off the arbor.
Page 35 of 62
6. Put your spring into the oven and relieve the stress. Remember, springs made of stainless steel wire will open up a little in the heat, while springs made of music wire will contract. When you've finished this process, let the spring air-cool and check the diameter. If you did your setup properly, it should be just what you want. Then, look at the coils. They should all lie flat against each other, all the way out to the ends of the spring body. If you see gaps in the body of the spring, that means that you let the wire guide go too far to the right while you were coiling. Now, another word about initial tension. It may or may not be important whether the loops on the ends of your spring line up with each other or cross. If the spring is long enough, you can twist the loops so that they either align or cross, and the initial tension in the coils will hold them in that position. The information that follows, which will tell you how to make loops, assumes that the position of the loops IS important: if it's not, then just make the loops and let the spring's initial tension take care of how they align.
Making Loops
This section will tell you how to make one type of loop; a basic, no-frills type of loop that will do the trick for most springs. There are other types of loops that are stronger and prettier but to make them, you need tooling that is specially made for making this type of loop and nothing else. Brillisour & Moline used to make looping pliers designed for light wire, but I'm afraid they're out of business. If anyone knows of a new source for these, lemme know. NEWS FLASH: "Hook-Kon" brand looping pliers are available from Advance Car Mover! These are the same pliers mentioned above - I've got a pair and they work great for light wire extension springs! Simple loops: 1. Cut off the end of your spring, leaving only coils that touch each other all the way around. 2. Mount your spring between two looping plates in a vise, like this:
3. Reach into the center of the spring coil with your looping rod, hooking the tip of the rod under the first coil:
Page 36 of 62
4. Bend the coil upwards by pushing down on the rod until when you let go, the top of the coil is directly over the center of the spring:
5. With the looping rod, reach under the coil you just bent up and snag the end of the wire with the tip of the rod:
Page 37 of 62
6. Bend the end of the coil so that it aligns with the body of the spring itself:
Now you've made one end of the spring. The next thing to do is to figure out how much you have to cut off the other end to make the whole thing the length you want it to be. If it's a matter of being just a little short, you can always extend your hooks by straightening out the wire after if comes off the body of the spring. If it's a short spring and you're just making one from the coil you have, count the coils and add enough to make the loop -- just shy of a full coil. If it's a short spring and you've wound a long coil, do the same thing and separate the first spring from the main body with wire cutters (or with your cutoff wheel, if you're working with heavier wire). You can cut the whole coil to about the right length, but remember, you have to add "just shy of a full coil" to each end of the spring to make it come out right. If it's a long spring (or you just don't want to bother counting coils), measure the body of the coil and then add about 1-3/4 coils. Once you've trimmed the body to size, go ahead and make the second loop, exactly the same way that you made the first. Then, doublecheck the length of the spring -usually, inside one hook to inside the other will give you the best check on this -- and see if it's what you want. If it's too short, you have a couple of options. You can make the next spring with more coils in the body, or you can make the next spring with the fancier type of loop.
Page 38 of 62
Swivel Hooks
Extension springs are sometimes made with hooks that swivel:
Doing this without kickpress tooling is abysmally difficult, so your best bet, if you have to have this type of spring, is to have it made commercially.
Page 39 of 62
COMPRESSION SPRINGS
This chapter will tell you how to make compression springs. Making compression springs is a lot more fun than making either extension or torsion springs, but it's also a lot more complicated.
Before we start, let's have a word about equipment. Compression springs have pitch -that's the distance between the open coils in the spring -- and to make a spring with pitch means that you have to be able to control how fast your wire guide travels from left to right as the arbor turns around. With a lathe, it's easy. You just engage the lead screw and away you go. But with a drill or a hand winder, it's more difficult. Not impossible, just more difficult. Spring shops get around the difficulty by buying a hand-winding machine designed for making light compression springs. These are designed so that once you set it up, you can make any number of springs and they will all be exactly the same. Carlson Company, Inc. (http://www.carlsoncoinc.com) is one manufacturer of hand-winders: they can be contacted at 605 Bain St., Springdale AR 72764 or by phone at (501) 7562169. Using a lathe, especially for light wire, you're likely to get a lot of different springs, even though you think you're doing the same thing each time you wind one. That's the difference between doing the job "by eye" and having professional equipment.
Wire Length
The first thing to do is figure out how much wire you'll need to make a spring. To do this: 1. Take the outside diameter of the spring and multiply it by 3.3. 2. Take the number of active coils and add 9. 3. Multiply the results of steps 1 and 2 together. 4. Add in a fudge factor. With light wire, make the fudge factor about 6"; with medium wire, about 3'; with heavy wire, about 6'. 5. Write the result down. If you're WAY off, you can save yourself a lot of wire by cutting it closer. By writing down what you think you'll need, you'll know how much you can change this figure and still have a margin for safety.
Page 40 of 62
2. The second step is to set the speed of the lead screw so that the coils will be properly spaced along the arbor. To do this, measure (or figure out by math, or guess) how far apart the coils should be. The quick way to ballpark the pitch is: 1. Take the free length of the spring and subtract 11/2 times the diameter of the wire. 2. Divide the result by the number of active coils. 3. Then turn on your lathe and engage the lead screw. Hold a piece of chalk tight against the tool post and move the post toward the arbor until the chalk just touches it. Let the chalk mark the arbor for a couple of turns, and then stop the lathe. 4. Measure the distance between your chalk marks and compare it to what you want. Adjust the speed of your lead screw until they're about the same. Once you've gotten your lead screw setting, you can go ahead and make your first trial spring: 1. Cut a piece of wire to the length you figured out above. Be sure that anyone else in the area stays out of danger while you do the rest of this. Also, get your oven heated up. 2. Put the wire into your setup and move your wire guide to the left, close enough to the pickup pin so that the wire catches on both. Your setup should now look like this:
Page 41 of 62
3. READ THE NEXT STEP ALL THE WAY THROUGH BEFORE YOU START IT. Start your coiling. Move the chuck DEAD SLOW until the wire has come around for one full coil. Lay down at least two full coils touching each other. The way you do this is to have your wire guide a little to the LEFT of where the wire lays down on the arbor, like this:
4. When you have these first coils laid down on the arbor, you'll then need to do two things at the same time. 1. First, engage your lead screw. If you're winding wire over about .187", DO NOT reach over the wire to grab the lead screw control! Instead, reach UNDER the wire. That way, if the wire guide breaks, the wire won't take your arm off at the shoulder. 2. Second, start counting your coils. Count "one" each time the point at which the active coils separate from the end coils passes the top of the chuck. Looking at the setup from the top, this is the point you use to count:
3. Keep counting until you reach the number of active coils you want in the finished spring, and then let a couple more coils wind on, keeping your count going. Then disengage the lead screw. The wire will close up on itself and start to form closed coils. 4. Let a couple of closed coils form on the arbor and then turn off the lathe. DON'T LET THE "BACK" END OF THE WIRE PASS THE PIN ON THE WIRE GUIDE! Write down your final coil count for reference.
Page 42 of 62
5. Reverse the chuck slowly so that the spring is loose on the arbor. Don't let the pickup pin or the jaws of the chuck catch the front end of the wire as the spring gets loose on the arbor! If there's a lot of extra wire, cut it off. Then, put your spring into the oven and relieve the stress. For this trial, you can leave it in the oven for half an hour. Remember that stress relief will cause music wire springs to close up slightly, while stainless steel will expand. When you've finished this process, let the spring air-cool and measure it to see how close you came to what you want. Check the diameter first. If it's not OK, don't bother going any further: you'll need a different arbor, which will change all the rest of your dimensions. If the diameter is OK, count the number of active coils in your spring. You should be pretty close: for a small number of springs, being a quarter coil off either way is OK. If you're more than a quarter coil off, figure out how much more or less you need and change your coil count for the next trial.
Page 43 of 62
Grinding
BEFORE YOU START, PUT ON A PAIR OF GLOVES. There's nothing quite so much fun as accidentally touching your hand to a moving grinding wheel! Then, make sure that there's nothing flammable nearby: grinding will give off sparks! Take your spring over to your grinding wheel and grind it square. Some tips: Hold the spring lightly, so that if it catches on the grinding wheel it won't drag your hand along with it. A standard bench grinder will work for light wire, but whatever size grinder you're using, grind on the side of the wheel -- not the front. Start grinding with the free end up, rotating the spring about 1/8 of a turn every so often. Keep the spring square with the grinding wheel. With light wire, it's easy. Heavy wire takes some practice. Spring shops have jigs that they use for keeping the springs square while grinding. Move the spring from side to side across the surface of the grinding wheel (which prevents the spring from digging a groove in it). Keep the body of the spring perpendicular to the flat side of the wheel, and don't forget to dress the wheel from time to time, especially if you're grinding stainless steel or other softer material. Every few seconds, dip the end of the spring into some water to keep it cool. If it starts to glow red, it's WAY too hot. Stainless steel has to be kept cooler than other types of wire. When you've ground the top surface, start to rotate the spring so that the grinding wheel ends up hitting 3/4 of the first coil. Grind until the tip of the first coil is about 3/4 ground away. If you've kept the spring square to your wheel, that'll give you a good grind.
Page 44 of 62
If you're looking at the end of the spring, the ground surface should look like this:
The other thing to check is how square your ground ends are. You can do this by setting your spring down next to a carpenter's square, a machinist's square, a book, or anything else that stands up straight. Then, holding the bottom end of the spring next to your square, turn the spring around and watch the gap between the square and the top end. If your spring is perfectly square, there will be no gap as you turn the spring around. A small gap is OK, since the ends of the spring will flatten out under load. If there's a big gap, then you need to grind the end some more. (Commercial squareness in spring shops is +3 degrees.) When you're finished grinding the end surfaces, use a file or a pointed grinding stone to get rid of any burrs on both the outside and the inside of the ends.
Free Length
Once you've ground your ends, measure the length of the spring from end to end ("free length"). If it's not what you want, you may have to adjust your lead screw speed. Here's how to tell what adjustments to make: If the number of active coils is right but the spring is too short, keep the coil count the same and increase the speed of the lead screw. If the number of active coils is right but the spring is too long, keep the coil count the same and decrease the speed of the lead screw. If the number of active coils is too low and the spring is too short, increase your coil count. If the number of active coils is too low and the spring is too long, increase your coil count and decrease the speed of your lead screw. If the number of active coils is too high and the spring is too short, decrease your coil count and increase the speed of your lead screw. If the number of active coils is too high and the spring is too long, decrease your coil count.
One last thing. If your spring is good except that it's just a little long, you may be able to shorten it without any more grinding. There are two ways to do this:
Setting solid: Take the spring and put enough load on it to make all the open coils touch each other all the way around. This is called setting the spring solid, and it might shorten your How to make Springs Page 45 of 62
spring up a little bit. Remember that when you put a load on a compression spring, it'll want to spring back to its free length. If you hold it unevenly, it might fly out sideways. Best bet, if you're going to set your springs solid, is to mount your arbor in a vise, slip your spring(s) onto the arbor, and set them solid using a piece of flat steel, drilled to accommodate the arbor. This will prevent your springs from flying away and hurting someone.
Heat setting: Heat setting your springs will make them shorter than setting them solid will. You MUST heat set springs that will be used somewhere hot -- like inside an engine, for instance. Here's how to do it: 1. Find a rod that's longer than your spring and just a little bit narrower than the inside diameter of the spring. The arbor you used to coil the spring should work nicely. 2. Grind a flat spot near one end and make two collet clamps. Mount one so that the set screw fits into the flat spot on the rod. 3. Slide your spring onto the rod up against the collet clamp and slide the other collet clamp on after it. 4. Set the spring solid ON THE BAR, using a vise as in "setting solid" above, and tighten the set screw on the second collet clamp so that it holds the spring in that position. AFTER THIS POINT, BE VERY CAREFUL NOT TO POINT EITHER END OF THE ROD AT ANYONE, INCLUDING YOURSELF! 5. Stick the rod, with the spring and collet clamps, into your oven. The longer you let it cook, or the higher the temperature, the shorter the spring will get. 6. Take the rod out of the oven and let it air-cool. 7. MAKING SURE THAT THE ENDS OF THE ROD POINT AWAY FROM YOU, loosen the second collet clamp. If you're working with heavy wire, mount the "tail" end of the rod in a vise, so that when the collet clamp breaks loose, it won't go anywhere. The spring will bounce back to near its free length, and you can check it against what you want.
Page 46 of 62
FINISHING
This section will tell you about a few of the finishing touches you can put on your springs. Some of these are necessary, while others may be called for by the design you have in mind.
Tweaking
Sad to say, your spring may not be exactly what you want. Sometimes not all is lost though -- you should know, first, how to correct what's wrong and second, what you can do to "tweak" your springs into shape. First, how to correct what's wrong: Increasing the Number of coils Diameter of the spring Diameter of the wire Will give you A weaker spring: it will take less force to deflect the spring a certain amount. A weaker spring: it will take less force to deflect the spring a certain amount. A stronger spring: it will take more force to deflect the spring a certain amount.
(You'll note that this is the same data you read about in the section on spring design.) Sometimes you'll be able to "tweak" your springs into shape, especially when they're not too far off, and also especially before you've relieved the stress. Here are some techniques you can use: You can open up the diameter a notch or two by grabbing the ends of the wire in your hands and twisting the coil gently in the opposite direction. This works best on short springs with few coils. On longer springs with many coils, you can open the diameter up by simply dropping the spring onto a hard surface (like maybe the floor). Compression springs can be shortened by setting them solid or heat setting them (see the section on compression springs). You can lengthen a compression spring by driving a wedge in between each pair of coils. Be careful to use the same amount of force each time you do this, and also be sure you do it evenly all the way up and down the spring body. Note that when you do this, the diameter of the spring will also open up.
Page 47 of 62
Necessary Steps
Stress relief Spring wire that gets bent has to have the bending stress relieved. Here are the stress relief guidelines for all common spring wire materials. Material Aluminum Basic Brass Beryllium copper Bronze Chrome Silicon Chrome Vanadium Elgiloy Hard drawn Inconel Inocnel 718 Inconel X #1 temper Inconel X spring temper K Monel Maraging flat stock Maraging wire Monel Music wire Ni-span C Oil Tempered Premier Rene' 41 Stainless steel (302) Stainless steel (17-4 or 17-7) Titanium Movement (none) (none) (none) close slightly (none) close close open (none) (none) (none) (none) (none) (none) (none) (none) (none) close (open) close slightly (none) (none) open open open Temperature 400F 200C (none) (just warm) 600F 315C 350F 180C 800F 430C 800F 430C 900F 480C 500F 260C 800F 430C 1375F 750C 1375 F 750C then 700F then 370C 1250F 680C 1000F 540C 950F 510C 850F 450C 600F 315C 500F 260C 1250F 680C 500F 260C 625F 330C 1400F 760C 600F 315C 480C 900F 800F 430C Time (hrs) 1/2 (none) -1 1/2 1/2 1/2 1/2 5 1/3 1 16 16 1 4 4 4+ 1/2 1 1 3 1/2 1/2 16 1 1 10
Page 48 of 62
Passivating Working with stainless steel creates "free iron" contamination on the surface that can later rust and create problems with the part and its working environment. The process of removing this free iron is called passivation: here's how you do it. BEFORE YOU START, find a safe spot to do this. You should do it outdoors, and away from anyplace where animals or other people can get into it. 1. Put your springs into a stainless steel basket, which you made on the tooling chapter. 2. Fill your passivating tank with acid. The tank itself can be anything large enough that doesn't leak and is made out of stainless steel. An old sink, fitted with a stainless steel plug in the drain hole, works great. Muriatic acid -- the same kind they use for swimming pools -- is a good acid to use. Pour the acid into the tank, being careful not to get ANY on your body or your clothes. 3. Lower the basket with the springs into the tank and let it sit there for an hour. 4. After an hour, lift the basket out of the tank and wash the springs with plain water. If you want to save the acid for later use, put it back into its original container and WASH OUT THE TANK so that no animals or people can get into it accidentally. Don't passivate anything but stainless, by the way: the acid will eat non-stainless steel and ruin the springs.
Optional Steps
Depending on where you want your springs to go, you may want them to look shiny. If you do, you can have them plated after you're finished making them. Plating will not change their dimensions. You can have springs plated with chrome, silver, gold, or any other metal. Springs that are used to make electrical connections are usually plated with silver or gold. If you're not in the plating business yourself, your best bet is to get your springs plated commercially, rather than try to do it yourself. Also depending on the use of the springs you make, you may want to have them painted or dipped in rubber (like if you want to hang something from an extension spring and not let the spring scratch whatever it is that's hanging from it). I personally think that small-wire springs can be beautiful, and although I've never done it myself, there's no reason why someone couldn't make jewelry using them as a starting point. Earrings, for instance. If you want to try this out, go right ahead.
Page 49 of 62
Page 50 of 62
Variable-pitch springs: Sometimes you'll want a compression spring that starts out "soft" and after a certain load is placed on it, becomes stiffer. This is called a variablepitch spring, and you can see springs like this in some motorcycle shock absorbers:
These are pretty tricky to make, but you can do it. Here's how: 1. Make your setup as you would for any other compression spring. 2. Find the right settings for your lead screw for each of the segments of the coil. 3. Start to wind the spring. When you've wound what you want at the first pitch, STOP THE LATHE and change the lead screw speed setting to the second position. 4. Continue winding at the second pitch until you've finished the spring. The key is to have some way to remember TWO coil counts: one for the first section, and one for the second. Once you can do this, then you can change where you switch from one lead-screw speed to another and come out with the exact spring that you want. Snap-rings: Snap rings are easy. Just coil an extension spring with the right diameter and cut off single rings, one at a time, with wire cutters. Double torsion springs: You recall how torsion springs can be either left-handed or right-handed? Well, sometimes you'll want to make a torsion spring that's both. Such springs are sometimes found on clipboards, and they might look like this: Making double torsion springs means making some pretty specialized tooling, and the best way to actually wind them is with a hand-winder. Here's how: 1. First, find the right size of arbor for making the coils. The arbor will have to be at least a few inches longer than the widest part of the coils. 2. Grind a flat spot on the arbor, narrower than the distance between the insides of the two coils. 3. Drill a hole through the arbor at the flat spot.
Page 51 of 62
4. Make a short pin that'll fit into the hole in your arbor. The pin should be an inch or so longer that the arbor is thick, and have a bend in one end. The other end should be slightly rounded, like this: 5. Now, get a piece of flat stock as thick as the inside gap between the two coils of the spring. Grind it like this:
6. Drill a hole in this piece (the tongue piece) so that when you put the arbor, tongue piece, and pin together, they look like this:
7. Make TWO wire guides, one for each side of the spring. Make sure that the pins on the wire guides come out one to the left and one to the right. Whew! You're about half done! 8. The next step is to prepare your wire: 1. The first step is to figure out how much wire you'll need to make a spring. Do this the same way you did for a single torsion spring, figuring out how much you'll need for ONE SIDE of the double torsion spring. Don't forget the fudge factor. When you're done, then just double your answer: that'll do for a start.
Page 52 of 62
2. Take a length of wire and form a U in the center. (Your design may call for other bends in the center piece -- I call it a "U" just for simplicity's sake.) This will be the tongue of your spring, so make sure you get the inside dimension of the bend the right size. You can form the U using any of the bending jigs we've discussed. 3. Save this setup. After you make your first spring all the way through, you'll use it again to make as many springs of this design as you need. 9. Now it's time to actually coil the springs. Chuck up your arbor in your hand winder. Leave enough room between the chuck and the flat spot to fit one side of the completed coil, the width of one wire guide, plus at least half an inch. 10. Slide the left-hand wire guide onto the arbor. That's the one with the pin coming out the RIGHT side. 11. Slide the tongue piece onto the flat spot on the arbor and put the pin through both to hold them together. 12. Slide the right-hand wire guide onto the arbor. 13. Hook your prepared wire onto the tongue piece and over the arbor. Hold it tight against the tongue piece as you catch each free end of the wire with the wire guides. Your setup should look like this:
14. With your left hand, put a little tension on the arbor -- enough to be sure that your wire guides have both caught the wire securely.
Page 53 of 62
15. Then start to wind, holding both wire guides with your right hand. Keep a little pressure toward the center of the spring from each side. Spring coils should start to form on either side of the tongue piece. You can let them "push" your wire guides outwards as you continue.
16. Stop winding when you have a little more coils down on each side than the finished spring will need. Back the winder off until the spring hangs free on the arbor. 17. Now, take the spring off the arbor: 1. Slide the right-hand wire guide off the arbor. 2. Use a finger to pull the tongue of the spring off the tongue piece. 3. Pull the pin out of the tongue piece. 4. Pull the tongue piece off the arbor. 5. Slide the spring free. Then, check your dimensions and change the number of coils you lay down until you've got the right number. Stress-relieve the coils and finish the ends like any other torsion spring. Note that because the two coils are mirror-images of each other, you'll probably need to make two setups to do any bending on the legs of the spring -- one for the right-hand coil and one for the left-hand coil. Wire forms: Wire forms are any shape made out of wire -- not just a coil. There are a jillion different kinds of wire forms: here's a common one.
You can make wire forms easily with round-nose pliers, or with a bending jig.
Page 54 of 62
Bedsprings: These are basically hourglass-shaped compression springs in which the ends wrap around themselves. They're made on special automatic machinery -- I hope you don't need one bad enough to try making it yourself --they can probably be made by hand, but it would not be easy. Limited-travel extension springs: Sometimes you'll want to make an extension spring that only extends so far and then stops. You'll see these sometimes on screen doors:
As you can see, they're basically compression springs with a little extra added hardware. Here's how to make them: 1. Make the compression springs and don't grind the ends. 2. For each spring, make two wire forms that look like this:
3. Stick one of the wire forms through the center of the spring coil until the wire form sticks out the other end. 4. Slide one of the legs of the other wire form through the center part of the first one. 5. Flip the second wire form around so that the center part is aimed down the middle of the spring, and push it through. There you go! Braided wire springs: Howitzers and other military hardware use springs that have to handle sudden significant loads. Ordinary solid-wire springs would shatter under the stress of artillery recoil, so for these situations springs are made out of braided wire. I haven't seen any of these myself but I imagine that coiling such material would be similar to coiling solid wire.
Page 55 of 62
Very heavy wire: What's the heaviest wire that can be made into a spring? Well, coiling cold, the heaviest is about 5/8". Most spring shops won't coil 5/8" wire cold, though, because it's too dangerous. Springs made from larger material start as straight bars of steel with the ends tapered down. The bars are heated red-hot and then coiled on special machinery. I've seen 21/2" bars made into railroad suspension springs, and I've heard of 6" bars being made into compression springs that are used as shock absorbers for underground military command sites. If you need a spring made with wire thicker than .375", I'd recommend going to a spring shop and having them make your springs for you. With a big enough lathe and a thorough awareness of wire safety, you can coil up to .625", but frankly, most springmakers you talk to will think you're crazy. Very light wire: Common commercial coiling machines typically handle wire as fine as .010", but springs have been made with wire as fine as .002" using custom-made micro coilers. Winding extremely fine wire by hand is difficult because the wire tangles easily and cuts flesh even easier. Leave these to the pros, OK?
Leaf springs: Leaf springs start out as bars of flat stock, which are then heated red-hot and formed, either by machine or by hand. If you need leaf springs, best bet is to go to a spring shop that specializes in making them. Belleville washers: These are just like regular washers -- flat metal donuts -- except How to make Springs Page 56 of 62
that the inside of the washer is higher than the outside. Belleville washers are mounted in a pack and with a bunch of them together, make a very strong spring: Belleville washers are made by a stamping process that's best done in a spring shop. Clock springs: Some springs are made from wide, flat stock and coiled up like the shell of a snail. These are called clock springs, and the material they're made from is called "blue clock", because the color of the steel is blue. Springs like this are found inside clocks, retractor reels, and other machinery. Take apart an old thermostat and you'll see that the sensor element is basically a clock spring. You can make them on a lathe, but you'll need special tooling that's not easy to make. Your best bet, again, is to go to a spring shop and get them made for you.
Page 57 of 62
Spring Shops
In almost every major city you will find spring factories. Some specialize in certain kinds of springs, while others can make anything you can dream up. The major springmaking centers in the United States are the area around Detroit (which serves the automobile industry) and the area around Los Angeles. Most spring shops are divided into two parts: the office and the shop itself. Inside the shop, there are often four departments:
This is the area where the automatic coiling machinery operates. Automatic coilers can handle wire from .010" to .500", and once they're set up, can pretty much run all day long. Grinding This is the department where the ends of compression springs are ground. A lot of the work is done with automatic machines, which pass the springs between two grinding wheels that can be four feet across. Secondary The secondary department is where wire is bent by hand. This is where the ends of torsion springs are formed, where loops are put onto the ends of extension springs, and where wire forms are made. Short This is where small quantities of springs are made by hand. If a Order customer wants less than 50 of a spring, the job is given to the short order department, since they can generally make the springs faster and their work doesn't tie up the automatic coilers. Most of the information on this site would be used in the short order part of the shop. Depending on the size of the shop and what it's equipped to make, there can also be machinists to make tooling, a shipping and receiving department, a quality control department, and a "hot shop", where larger sizes of wire are made into really big springs.
Coiling
Page 58 of 62
The hourly rates will vary from shop to shop. Generally, they'll figure an hour to set up an automatic machine, and they'll estimate the time it takes to do the coiling, grinding, looping, etc., based on what they know the machines and people can do. They'll have a minimum charge to cover their expenses, even for small orders. There are also catalog stores, which stock a variety of more-or-less common spring designs. Some have catalogs, and you can call them and place an order just like you would with any other retailer.
Careers in Springmaking
Someone applying for work in a spring shop will generally start out either in grinding (the dirtiest, most boring part of the work) or in secondary. Experienced springmakers will tend to make a home for themselves either in coiling or in short order. Springmaking is a good field, especially if you're into machinery. But once you're working in a spring shop, it's hard to transfer from the shop into the front office. Also, if you've spent a few years in springmaking, it's next to impossible to find work in any other trade. Beats selling pencils on the corner tho ... :-)
Page 59 of 62
GLOSSARY
These are many of the common words that have definitions in the springmaking field. The definitions are my own (caveat) and are admittedly not complete. This is not a dictionary -- it's just another tool you can use to do a better job.
Active coil
Arbor Back gear Beryllium copper (wire) Bundle Cast Chrome Silicon (wire) Chrome Vanadium (wire) Closed and ground end Closed end Coil
Double torsion
A coil of wire which contributes to the motive force of a spring. In extension and torsion springs, all the coils are active coils. In compression springs, only the coils which show daylight between them are active coils. A bar or pipe around which wire is wound to form a spring. A mechanism in a lathe that allows the chuck to turn very slowly. An exotic material that can be made into springs. A roll or coil of wire as it is shipped from the manufacturer. The curvature in wire that results from its being bundled into coils at the factory. An alloy of steel, stronger than Oil Tempered wire. An alloy of steel, stronger than Oil Tempered wire. Referring to the end of a compression spring where the wire forms one dead coil and is ground square. Referring to the end of a compression spring where the wire forms one dead coil and is not ground square. 1) (noun) The wire of a spring going completely around once (see active coil, dead coil). 2) (noun) A bundle of wire as it is shipped from the factory. 3) (verb) To form (wire) into a spring. Making smaller. A spring which derives its usefulness because it pushes against a load which makes it smaller. A coil of wire which does not contribute to the motive force of a spring. In extension and torsion springs, there are no dead coils. In compression springs, the coils at each end that lay against each other are dead coils: all the rest are active coils. A form of torsion spring that has two coils; one lefthanded and one right-handed, connected by a central tongue. Making longer. A spring which derives its usefulness because it pulls against a load which makes it longer. The length of a spring with no load applied. A flat (usually) steel platform used to ensure that the ends of compression springs orient correctly to a grinding wheel. 1) The process of tempering metal. 2) (colloquially) The process of stress relief. A machine which derives its usefulness by rotating stock Page 60 of 62
OT (Oil Tempered wire) Passivate (-ation) Phosphor bronze (wire) Pigtail Pitch Spring [dia]
Stainless Steel (wire) Stress Titanium Tool post Torsion Torsion spring
against which tooling may be brought to bear. Springs are often wound on a lathe. A mechanism in a lathe that allows the tool post to move from side to side at a precise rate. An arbor. A high-carbon steel alloy used in making springs. Referring to the end of a compression spring where the pitch of the spring extends all the way to the end of the wire, and does not form any dead coils. A lower-carbon steel alloy used in making springs. The process of removing chemical coatings from stainless steel by immersion in an acid bath. An exotic alloy sometimes used in making springs. A form taken by tie wire when used to secure a bundle of heavy spring wire. The distance, center to center, between two active coils of a compression spring. A helically formed piece of (usually) wire which derives its usefulness because it tries to regain its original shape when subjected to a load. See Compression Spring, Extension Spring, Torsion Spring. An alloy used in making springs that will not rust. The most common stainless steels are called 302 and 17-7. Misalignment of the molecules in wire due to bending. A strong, lightweight metal sometimes used in making springs. The part of a lathe that allows tooling to be mounted and used on stock. Twisting. A spring which derives its usefulness by trying to return to its original shape when subjected to a load traveling around its axis. A form of compression spring that has more than one pitch. To coil (a spring). Metal, usually round and solid in section, used in making springs.
Page 61 of 62
Compression Spring:
Extension Spring
Torsion Spring
Page 62 of 62