Hospital Beds and Patient Lifts
Counterbalance and controlled motion for adjustable bed sections, lift booms, transfer aids, and examination couches — engineered for OEM integration and long-term aftermarket supply.
- 1 The Quiet Mechanism Behind Safe Patient Positioning
- 2 Four Places Gas Springs Earn Their Keep in Patient Equipment
- 3 One Spring or Two: Sizing for Patient-Bearing Loads
- 4 When to Specify Stainless Steel or Locking Gas Springs
- 5 Specifying Gas Springs for Hospital Beds and Patient Lifts
- 6 Why Medical OEMs Source Gas Springs for Hospital Beds and Patient Lifts from Newtone
- 7 Frequently Asked Questions
- 8 Conclusion
- 9 Get a Specification or Quote
The Quiet Mechanism Behind Safe Patient Positioning
Gas springs for hospital beds and patient lifts do quiet, safety-critical work. They counterbalance a backrest so a single nurse can raise a patient without straining, they hold a lift boom steady mid-transfer, and they let an examination couch move smoothly instead of dropping. When the force is specified correctly, the motion feels effortless and controlled. When it is wrong, the section is heavy to lift, drifts under load, or slams — and on patient-handling equipment that is not a comfort problem, it is a safety one.
Newtone is a gas spring manufacturer based in Turkey, exporting to more than 60 countries, with over two decades supplying OEM and replacement units to equipment builders across North America, Europe, and beyond. This page is written for the people who actually specify these parts: OEM design engineers integrating a new bed or lift platform, procurement managers sourcing replacement springs for service networks, and distributors looking for a stable long-term manufacturing partner.
Who this page is for: OEM engineers selecting force, stroke, and hold-type for adjustable patient sections; procurement managers sourcing matched replacement springs; and distributors evaluating a manufacturer for consistent, traceable supply.
Four Places Gas Springs Earn Their Keep in Patient Equipment
Each location carries a different load, pivots through a different angle, and operates in a different cleaning environment. Treating them as one generic “lift support” is the fastest route to a spring that is wrong for half the doors it ships on.
Backrest (Fowler) Sections
The most demanding application. The spring counterbalances both the panel and a fraction of the patient’s upper-body weight, through a wide arc. Required force changes sharply with angle, so the worst case must be checked at the near-closed position, not when the section is already raised.
Knee & Leg (Gatch) Sections
Lower load than the backrest but an awkward geometry at the break point, where the effective moment arm is small. These often run a single spring, but the moment-arm value at full fold determines whether one is enough or two are needed.
Patient Lifts, Hoists & Transfer Aids
Boom and sit-to-stand mechanisms see the highest forces and the highest safety stakes. Force matching and a generous fatigue margin matter here — a drifting or unbalanced boom under a suspended patient is unacceptable.
Examination Couches & Treatment Chairs
Backrests and footrests that a clinician sets and leaves. These are the classic case for rigid-lock (lock-anywhere) springs, so the section stays precisely where it is positioned, plus disinfectant-resistant surfaces for constant wipe-down.
One Spring or Two: Sizing for Patient-Bearing Loads
A gas spring’s output is straightforward physics: F = p × A, where the internal gas pressure p acts on the rod cross-sectional area A = πd²/4. Doubling rod diameter quadruples force at the same pressure — which is why patient-bearing sections often reach for two slimmer springs rather than one oversized unit that no longer fits the mounting envelope.
⬤ Single Spring Setup
- Supported load under ~10 kg (22 lb)
- Narrow, centered section, no lateral flex
- Examination footrests, light access panels
- Knee sections with adequate moment arm
- Simpler installation, lower cost
⬤ Paired Spring Setup
- Backrests, lift booms, transfer surfaces
- Patient-bearing or wide deck sections
- Loads above ~10 kg (22 lb) or offset hinges
- Even load distribution, reduced panel twist
- Springs force-matched to ±5%, same batch
When to Specify Stainless Steel or Locking Gas Springs
Standard units handle most enclosed mechanisms reliably. Two scenarios justify an upgraded specification on medical equipment, and both are easy to identify at the design stage.
Stainless Steel for Cleaned and Sterile Environments
Hospital equipment is wiped down with disinfectants many times a day — alcohols, quaternary ammonium compounds, chlorine solutions — and some surfaces face washdown cleaning. Any spring exposed to that regime should use a 316L body and rod: it resists the pitting and surface corrosion that eventually let cleaning fluid reach the seals. For these wipe-down and sterile-area positions, stainless steel gas springs are worth specifying as standard. For fully enclosed internal mechanisms, a black nitrided rod (900–1000 HV, 20–30 µm) with HNBR seals is sufficient at lower cost.
Locking and Rigid-Lock Springs for Held Positions
Where a section must stay put under load — an examination couch backrest a clinician has set, a maintenance hatch held open during service, a positioning table — a locking gas spring adds a mechanical hold. End-lock units hold at full extension for hold-open safety; rigid-lock (lock-anywhere) units hold at any point along the stroke for precise patient positioning. The release method depends on the device, so it is worth confirming the locking type against the load and the operator’s access at the design stage.
Specifying Gas Springs for Hospital Beds and Patient Lifts
| Section / Device | Supported Weight | Recommended Force | Spring Count | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Examination couch backrest | 4–10 kg (9–22 lb) | 150–400 N (34–90 lbf) | 1 | Rigid-lock for set positioning |
| Bed backrest (Fowler) | 12–25 kg (26–55 lb) | 300–600 N each (67–135 lbf) | 2 | Paired — request matched batch |
| Knee / leg (Gatch) | 6–14 kg (13–31 lb) | 200–450 N (45–101 lbf) | 1–2 | Check moment arm at the break |
| Patient lift / hoist boom | 20–40 kg (44–88 lb) | 600–1300 N each (135–292 lbf) | 1–2 | High fatigue margin; force-matched |
| Sit-to-stand transfer aid | 10–25 kg (22–55 lb) | 300–700 N (67–157 lbf) | 1–2 | Damped motion; consider lock |
| Wipe-down / sterile area | Any | Per above | Per above | Stainless steel recommended |
The forces above are starting points. The final value comes from a moment balance about the hinge, because a section’s required force is driven as much by geometry as by weight.
- F — required force per spring, N (lbf)
- W — supported weight = m × g, N — panel plus patient load fraction
- Lg — hinge to combined center of gravity, mm (in)
- φ — load-arm angle above horizontal at the position checked
- r — spring perpendicular moment arm, mm (in)
- n — number of springs
Worked example. A backrest carries m = 18 kg (40 lb) at the near-horizontal worst case, so W = 18 × 9.81 = 177 N (40 lbf) and cos φ ≈ 1. With Lg = 400 mm (16 in) and a spring moment arm r = 70 mm (2.8 in), the total demand is 177 × 400 ÷ 70 ≈ 1011 N (227 lbf), or two matched springs of roughly 505 N (114 lbf) each. Two practical corrections then follow: gas spring force changes about 0.3% per °C, so size at the equipment’s normal operating temperature, and extension force runs slightly above compression force (progression ratio typically 1.2–1.6), which is what gives the smooth, damped close. Share your dimensions and our team will run this against the full standard gas spring range and confirm the right mounting bracket geometry.
Why Medical OEMs Source Gas Springs for Hospital Beds and Patient Lifts from Newtone
We are a manufacturer, not a distributor. Every spring is built in our own facility in Turkey, so tolerance, material sourcing, and lead time stay under our control rather than a third party’s.
Frequently Asked Questions
Force comes from a moment balance about the section hinge. Multiply the supported weight (the panel plus the patient load fraction it counterbalances) by the horizontal distance from the hinge to the combined center of gravity, then divide by the spring’s perpendicular moment arm at the worst-case angle, which is usually near closed. For an 18 kg (40 lb) load at a 400 mm (16 in) arm with a 70 mm (2.8 in) spring moment arm, two springs of roughly 500 N (112 lbf) each will balance it. Share your geometry and Newtone will run the calculation.
Two causes dominate. An over-powered spring sits under constant static load when the section is closed, which accelerates seal wear, while an under-powered one forces the mechanism and the operator. The second cause is low-grade seal compounds that lose elasticity under repeated disinfectant exposure and temperature cycling. Specifying the correct force together with HNBR seals addresses both.
Specify 316L stainless steel when the spring is exposed to frequent disinfectant wipe-down, washdown cleaning, or high-humidity sterile areas. For enclosed internal mechanisms that are not exposed to cleaning agents, a black nitrided rod with HNBR seals provides sufficient corrosion protection at a lower cost.
A standard gas spring lifts and damps but does not hold a fixed point. A locking gas spring holds at full extension for hold-open safety on service or access panels. A rigid-lock (lock-anywhere) gas spring holds at any position along the stroke, which suits examination couches and positioning tables where the section must stay exactly where the clinician sets it.
Yes. Newtone supplies gas springs for new equipment integration and for service or aftermarket replacement, often from the same configuration, so replacement parts match the original force and stroke exactly. Batch traceability and engineering support are available.
Conclusion
On patient-handling equipment, a gas spring is invisible when it is right and a liability when it is wrong. The difference is rarely complicated: it comes down to a force value derived from a real moment balance rather than panel weight alone, a seal and rod specification matched to the cleaning environment, and a manufacturing tolerance tight enough to keep paired springs balanced under a suspended load.
Newtone has been solving exactly this problem for medical OEMs and distributors for over two decades. Whether you are designing a new bed or lift platform, replacing a failed spring in a fielded device, or qualifying a supplier for long-term production, we bring the engineering support around the part as well as the part itself.
Send us your section weight, hinge geometry, and stroke. We will return a force recommendation, a datasheet, and a quote — typically within 5 business hours.
Get a Specification or Quote
Tell us the section type, supported weight, and mounting geometry. Our team handles the force calculation, sample datasheet, and competitive pricing.