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Series and parallel springs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mechanics, two or more springs are said to be in series when they are connected end-to-end or point to point, and it is said to be in parallel when they are connected side-by-side; in both cases, so as to act as a single spring:

Series and Parallel
and

More generally, two or more springs are in series when any external stress applied to the ensemble gets applied to each spring without change of magnitude, and the amount strain (deformation) of the ensemble is the sum of the strains of the individual springs. Conversely, they are said to be in parallel if the strain of the ensemble is their common strain, and the stress of the ensemble is the sum of their stresses.

Any combination of Hookean (linear-response) springs in series or parallel behaves like a single Hookean spring. The formulas for combining their physical attributes are analogous to those that apply to capacitors connected in series or parallel in an electrical circuit.

Formulas

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Equivalent spring

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The following table gives formula for the spring that is equivalent to a system of two springs, in series or in parallel, whose spring constants are and .[1] (The compliance of a spring is the reciprocal of its spring constant.)

Quantity In Series In Parallel
Equivalent spring constant
Equivalent compliance
Deflection (elongation)
Force
Stored energy

Partition formulas

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Quantity In Series In Parallel
Deflection (elongation)
Force
Stored energy

Derivations of spring formula (equivalent spring constant)

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Keith Symon (1971), Mechanics. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-201-07392-7