AbraCalc

Spring Force: k = 100 N/m, 10 cm Displacement

A spring with k = 100 N/m stretched by 10 cm (0.1 m) exerts a restoring force of exactly 10 N.

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How to use this tool

  1. Enter spring constant k and displacement x in the fields above.
  2. Results update instantly as you type — or click Calculate.
  3. Read your restoring force f and the full breakdown beneath it.

This is the standard textbook Hooke's Law example: a 100 N/m spring stretched 10 cm pulls back with a 10 N force.

Frequently asked questions

What are typical spring constants?
Car suspension: 10,000–50,000 N/m; pen spring: ~2 N/m; lab spring: 10–100 N/m; human Achilles tendon: ~1000 N/m.
What does the negative sign mean?
The restoring force always opposes the displacement, pulling back toward equilibrium. Stretch it right (+x) and the force acts left (−F).