The history of springs
Very
simple, non-coil springs have been used throughout history. Even a resilient
tree branch can be used as a spring. More sophisticated spring devices date to
the Bronze Age, when eyebrow tweezers were common in several
cultures. During the third century B.C., Greek engineer Ctesibius of Alexandria
developed a process for making "springy bronze" by increasing the
proportion of tin in the copper alloy, casting the part, and hardening it with
hammer blows. He attempted to use a combination of leaf springs to operate a
military catapult, but they were not powerful enough. During the second century
B.C., Philo of Byzantium, another catapult engineer, built a similar device,
apparently with some success. Padlocks were widely used in the ancient Roman
empire, and at least one type used bowed metal leaves to keep the devices
closed until the leaves were compressed with keys.
The
next significant development in the history of springs came in the Middle Ages.
A power saw devised by Villard de Honnecourt about 1250 used a water
wheel to push the saw blade in one direction, simultaneously bending a pole; as
the pole returned to its unbent state, it pulled the saw blade in the opposite
direction.
Coiled
springs were developed in the early fifteenth century. By replacing the system
of weights that commonly powered clocks with a wound spring mechanism,
clockmakers.
A
diagram depicting spring coiling done by a CNC machine.
were
able to fashion reliable, portable timekeeping devices. This advance made
precise celestial navigation possible for ocean-going ships.
In
the eighteenth century, the Industrial Revolution spurred the
development of mass-production techniques for making springs. During the 1780s,
British locksmith Joseph Bramah used a spring winding machine in his factory.
Apparently an adaptation of a lathe, the machine carried a reel of wire in
place of a cutting head. Wire from the reel was wrapped around a rod secured in
the lathe. The speed of the lead screw, which carried the reel parallel to the
spinning rod, could be adjusted to vary the spacing of the spring's coils.
Common
examples of current spring usage range from tiny coils that support keys on
cellular phone touchpads to enormous coils that support entire buildings and
protect them from earthquake vibration.