How Things Work

The official blog of Professor Michael Webber's Fall 2013 UGS Course "How Things Work."

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Shock Absorber, Spring

The shock absorber (spring ) reduce the shock because the spring is elastic. When spring is pressed, it will try to resile.
the Castilian, 78705
by Cunyuan Zheng
Unknown at 4:43 PM
Share

No comments:

Post a Comment

‹
›
Home
View web version

Contributors

  • Adarsh Nednur
  • Alex Booth
  • Ben Helgeson
  • Brandon Kerbow
  • Cruff
  • Greg Walker
  • Henry Pang
  • Isabelle
  • Jeremiah Fitzerald
  • Jubin Shah
  • Justin Baiko
  • Kimberlyann
  • Patrick L
  • Peter Lin
  • Rachel Tanguma
  • Raul.Pineda
  • Samantha Houston
  • Trevor Maycan
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • msulkis
  • smz24
Powered by Blogger.