Loss of force in canted coil springs can lead to poor electrical contact and sealing failure. Learn the root causes, failure modes, and proven engineering solutions to ensure long-term spring performance.
Canted coil springs are widely used in electrical contacts, EMI shielding, sealing systems, and precision mechanical assemblies due to their ability to deliver near-constant force over a wide deflection range. However, in demanding environments, engineers may encounter a critical issue: loss of force over time.
When a canted coil spring loses force, it can result in intermittent electrical contact, reduced shielding effectiveness, leakage, or complete system failure. Understanding why force loss occurs—and how to prevent it—is essential for ensuring long-term reliability.
This article explores the primary causes, typical failure modes, diagnostic methods, and proven solutions for loss of force in canted coil springs.

Loss of force refers to a reduction in the spring’s ability to maintain its designed load or contact pressure under a given deflection. Unlike conventional compression springs, canted coil springs rely on angled coils and elastic deformation to generate consistent force.
When force loss occurs, the spring may:
Fail to maintain electrical continuity
Provide insufficient EMI/RFI shielding pressure
Lose sealing integrity under vibration or thermal cycling
Stress relaxation is one of the most common causes of force loss, especially at elevated temperatures.
Occurs when the material gradually loses internal stress under constant deflection
Accelerated by high temperature and long dwell times
Common in stainless steel springs used beyond their thermal limits
High-risk environments: aerospace, automotive under-hood, power electronics
If a canted coil spring is compressed beyond its elastic range, permanent deformation may occur.
Typical causes include:
Incorrect groove depth or width
Excessive assembly force
Tolerance stack-up issues
Once plastic deformation occurs, the spring cannot recover its original force level.
Repeated compression and release can lead to fatigue-induced force degradation.
Factors that accelerate fatigue:
High cycle counts
Large deflection amplitudes
Sharp groove edges causing stress concentration
Not all spring materials perform equally under extreme conditions.
| Material | Temperature Resistance | Stress Relaxation Resistance |
|---|---|---|
| Stainless Steel | Moderate | Moderate |
| Beryllium Copper | Good | Good |
| Elgiloy® | Excellent | Excellent |
| Inconel® | Outstanding | Outstanding |
Using the wrong material can dramatically shorten service life.
Corrosion, oxidation, and chemical exposure can reduce effective cross-section and elasticity.
Common contributors:
Humidity and salt spray
Industrial chemicals
Galvanic corrosion in mixed-metal assemblies
| Failure Mode | System Impact |
|---|---|
| Intermittent electrical contact | Signal loss, system instability |
| Reduced EMI shielding | Compliance failures |
| Seal leakage | Contamination or pressure loss |
| Increased contact resistance | Heat generation and wear |
These failures often appear gradually, making early diagnosis critical.
Engineers can identify force loss through several methods:
Load-deflection testing to compare initial and aged performance
Thermal aging tests to evaluate stress relaxation
Visual inspection for coil distortion or flattening
Electrical resistance monitoring in contact applications
Early detection helps avoid costly field failures.
Select materials based on temperature, load, and environment, not just cost.
Use Elgiloy® or Inconel® for high-temperature or long-life applications
Choose Beryllium Copper for electrical contact stability
Proper groove geometry is essential.
Key design rules:
Avoid over-compression beyond recommended deflection
Ensure smooth groove surfaces
Maintain consistent radial clearance
Operating the spring within its optimal deflection window minimizes fatigue and stress relaxation.
Plating such as gold, silver, or tin-nickel can:
Reduce corrosion
Improve electrical performance
Extend operational life
Custom-engineered canted coil springs offer:
Tailored material and geometry
Application-specific testing
Predictable long-term performance
Standard springs may not be sufficient if your application involves:
Extreme temperatures
High vibration
Tight tolerance assemblies
Long service life requirements
Custom solutions help eliminate force loss before it becomes a failure.
Loss of force in canted coil springs is not a random failure—it is usually the result of material limits, design oversights, or environmental stress. By understanding the causes and failure modes, engineers can implement targeted solutions that ensure consistent force, reliable contact, and extended service life.
With the right material, proper groove design, and expert manufacturing support, canted coil springs can maintain their performance even in the most demanding applications.