Disc Springs

The disc spring, also known as the Belleville spring or washer, traces its origins to the mid-19th century when it was invented and patented by the French engineer Julien Belleville. From the outset, its unique conical disc design garnered attention for its ability to deliver exceptionally high loads within extremely compact spaces. The core advantage of disc springs over traditional coil compression springs lies in their capacity to provide several times to tens of times greater load within the same installation envelope. Moreover, by configuring them in series, parallel, or mixed arrangements, they can achieve highly flexible nonlinear or near-linear load-deflection characteristics.

Variants
Standard disc springs, guided disc spring assemblies (with guide rods/sleeves), trapezoidal cross-section disc springs.

Application Fields
Thanks to their high load density, compact design, long service life, and flexible stacking options, disc springs are widely used in heavy machinery and engineering equipment, electrical systems, power transmission, valves, rail transportation, petrochemical applications, and beyond.
Spring customization
Spring customization