Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 6, 2026

Hydrospring

A hydrospring or hydro-spring is a spring damped by hydraulic fluid being driven through holes in a piston, as the piston moves in response to a force.

Last revised
Jul 6, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
183 w
Citations
2
Source

A hydrospring or hydro-spring is a spring damped by hydraulic fluid (typically oil) being driven through holes in a piston, as the piston moves in response to a force.

The spring is often made of rubber. Inside a rubber hydrospring there are hydraulic viscous damping systems which damp movement in all three directions but require very few parts. Even the slack adjustment may be integrated into the element.1

Application

Hydrosprings are used mainly as shock absorbers in applications such as damped suspension in railway bogies, bulldozer blade shock absorbers and as recoil absorbers for artillery.

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Hecht, Markus (2007). Wear and Energy Saving Bogie Design with Rubber Primary Springs – Principles and Experiences (pdf). IHHA Specialist Technical Session (STS). Kiruna, Sweden.
  2. EP patent 1369616 
External links