At your request...
Torsion spring torque is
calculated the same way you
calculate a working load. To
calculate the
torque of a
torsional spring you must divide the
spring rate by the amount of degrees of deflection your
spring will be required to travel.
is a
constant with units of newton-meters / radian, variously called the
spring's torsion coefficient,
torsion elastic modulus, rate, or just
spring constant, equal to the change in torque required to twist the
spring through an angle of 1 radian. It is analogous to the
spring constant of a linear
spring.
Question: ■Derive The Torsional Spring Constant For The Rod Under Torsion, T = K@t Find K). Given Data: T (torque), C (cross-section Radius), L (length Of Bar), G (shear Modulus) Front View
View attachment 944478
Short answer.....the diameter of the bar plus how many degrees of rotation are the major factors. Since the diameter of the bar is increased, yes, the bar will be more resistsnt to twist but in order to accurately compare the two examples, one must figure the spring rate of the first bar then factor the percentage of the increase in two examples...spring rate is a linear relationship ..... the increase in area results in an increase in the spring constant assuming the identical degrees of rotation. Hopefully this answers you question.
BOB RENTON