I am shopping for new coils for the Patrol and want to go a little lower and a touch softer in spring rate.
- I know what my current 6inch springs are 290lbs front & 360lbs rear.
- I also know the obvious stuff like my wire diameter and number of winds etc.
My problem is that most 4x4 stores are happy to tell you that they have a ‘firm 5-inch lift’ but are useless at supplying info on spring rate.
So, is there any way that I can use measurements taken from the coils in the store to calculate (or guess at) the spring rate?
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Calculating Coil Rate
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Calculating Coil Rate
As soon as it was made idiot proof, someone went and designed a better idiot.
To Calculate Coil Spring Rate-
RATE= (9909 x material dia. x material dia. x material dia. x material dia.)
divided by
(no. of active coils x mean dia. x mean dia. x mean dia.)
Mean dia. = I.D. + material dia.
All measurements are in millimetres
Result is in N/mm
To convert answer to Kg/mm = N/mm x 0.10192
got this from http://www.industrialsprings.com.au/calc.htm
hope it helps
RATE= (9909 x material dia. x material dia. x material dia. x material dia.)
divided by
(no. of active coils x mean dia. x mean dia. x mean dia.)
Mean dia. = I.D. + material dia.
All measurements are in millimetres
Result is in N/mm
To convert answer to Kg/mm = N/mm x 0.10192
got this from http://www.industrialsprings.com.au/calc.htm
hope it helps
ozy1 wrote:To Calculate Coil Spring Rate-
RATE= (9909 x material dia. x material dia. x material dia. x material dia.)
divided by
(no. of active coils x mean dia. x mean dia. x mean dia.)
Mean dia. = I.D. + material dia.
All measurements are in millimetres
Result is in N/mm
To convert answer to Kg/mm = N/mm x 0.10192
got this from http://www.industrialsprings.com.au/calc.htm
hope it helps
Now, THAT'S WHAT I'M TALKING BOUT!
Cheers
As soon as it was made idiot proof, someone went and designed a better idiot.
ozy1 wrote:To Calculate Coil Spring Rate-
RATE= (9909 x material dia. x material dia. x material dia. x material dia.)
divided by
(no. of active coils x mean dia. x mean dia. x mean dia.)
Mean dia. = I.D. + material dia.
All measurements are in millimetres
Result is in N/mm
To convert answer to Kg/mm = N/mm x 0.10192
got this from http://www.industrialsprings.com.au/calc.htm
hope it helps
so what about the material constant?
I normally use a wire constant of 12 X (10 to the power of 6).
Note that the number of effective coils IS NOT the total number of coil windings. No. of effective coils is total number minus 1.5 coils.
This is to allow for the ends of the wire which are weaker in spring rate.
Cheers,
Pat
Note that the number of effective coils IS NOT the total number of coil windings. No. of effective coils is total number minus 1.5 coils.
This is to allow for the ends of the wire which are weaker in spring rate.
Cheers,
Pat
BIG.PAT
'92 Surf 2.4 TD 5 speed.
More Boost, Intercooled),
Body & sup lifts, 31x10.5 Simex M/Ts (Bigger soon) & Big Boomin Stereo!
More to come when the $$$$ sum.....
'92 Surf 2.4 TD 5 speed.
More Boost, Intercooled),
Body & sup lifts, 31x10.5 Simex M/Ts (Bigger soon) & Big Boomin Stereo!
More to come when the $$$$ sum.....
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