Spring Constant Calculator

Calculate spring constant (k), force, or displacement using Hooke's Law. Covers series and parallel springs, oscillation period, natural frequency, and energy stored.

N
m
Spring Constant k
Potential Energy
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
N
m
Spring Constant k (N/m)
Potential Energy (J)
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail
N/m
N/m
kg
m

Combined Springs

k (Series)
k (Parallel)

Oscillation

Oscillation Period (series k)
Natural Frequency

Energy & Units

Energy Stored (series k)
Series k (lbs/in)

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter force (N) and displacement (m) to find spring constant k.
  2. Use Find Force tab to calculate force from k and displacement.
  3. Use Find Displacement tab to solve for x.
  4. The Professional tab adds series/parallel combinations, oscillation period, and spring rate in lbs/in.

Formula

F = kx  |  k = F/x  |  x = F/k

PE = ½kx²

Series: 1/k_t = 1/k₁ + 1/k₂  |  Parallel: k_t = k₁ + k₂

Period: T = 2π√(m/k)

Example

Force = 50 N, displacement = 0.25 m: k = 50/0.25 = 200 N/m. PE = ½ × 200 × 0.25² = 6.25 J.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Hooke's Law states F = kx, where F is force (N), k is the spring constant (N/m), and x is displacement (m). It holds for small deformations within the elastic limit.
  • k = F/x. Apply a known force (or hang a known mass) and measure the displacement. For example, a 10 N force causing 0.05 m displacement gives k = 10/0.05 = 200 N/m.
  • For springs in series: 1/k_total = 1/k₁ + 1/k₂. The combined spring is weaker than either spring alone — it stretches more for the same force.
  • For springs in parallel: k_total = k₁ + k₂. The combined spring is stiffer — it deflects less for the same force.
  • T = 2π√(m/k), where m is mass in kg and k is spring constant in N/m. A stiffer spring or lighter mass gives a shorter (faster) period.

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