Industrial Gas Springs Inc - Gas Spring Solutions

Introduction

How it Works

Force

K Factor (Spring Rate)

Modified K Factors

Damping

Sizes & Lengths

Temperature

Temperature Ranges Sizes

Gas Spring Mounting / Horizontal Use

Release Valves

Hysteresis / Friction

Do's and Don'ts

How To Adjust The Force Of A Gas Spring
 » No Valve = No Release
 » T Valve (TV)
 » Side Release Valve (SRV)
 » Schrader Valve (RV)
 » Ball Valve (BV)
 » Difference TV-RV

Informational Videos



Contact Information

Industrial Gas Springs, Inc
140 Arrandale Blvd.
Exton, PA 19341
Phone:  610 430-0200
Toll Free: 888 427-7744
Fax:  484 872-8753
contact@indgassprings.com

Gas Spring Technical Info > How It Works

A gas filled spring consists of a precision rod attached to a piston moving within a sealed cylinder containing nitrogen at high pressure.  Output forces are the result of the differential between the pressure in the cylinder and atmospheric pressure outside the cylinder acting on the cross-section of the rod.  As the piston rod is introduced into the cylinder (compression stroke), the internal pressure increases according to the volume of gas displaced buy the rod.  This increase in Force or K-Factor is normally between 5% - 50%.  In comparison to mechanical springs, gas springs are almost constant force.

Because they operate on simple pressure differentials, gas springs will perform as well in the vacuum of space as they do on land.