How do you measure how strong a spring is?

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To measure the strength of a spring, one can determine its spring constant (k) using a simple method. Hang the spring from a hook, measure its initial length, then add a known weight and measure the new length. The spring constant is calculated by dividing the change in length by the weight applied. Once the spring constant is known, potential energy can be calculated using the formula (1/2)kx^2 for any compression distance. This practical approach requires only a ruler and a weight, making it feasible for home experiments.
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Homework Statement


So I have before me a set of springs about this size: http://tinyurl.com/8g7kvu5 . Some are a little longer, some are wider, and some are slightly stronger. I need a home-made way to measure how much potential energy each spring can build up if I compress it at 2 inches or 3 inches (or any inch for that matter). There just has to be some sort of constant thing you can measure for each spring that tells you how "strong" it is. How would I do that?

Homework Equations


F=kx

The Attempt at a Solution


I've tried compressing each string with my thumb and index finger, but I don't quite trust my subjective evaluation. I was hoping to get something more standardized. Should I use a spring scale? Do you guys know if there's a home-made method of measuring spring potential energy?
 
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so you're trying to measure the Spring Constant for each spring?
 
Hang the spring from a hook and measure its length, x_1. Add a weight to the end of the spring and measure the length, x_2, of the spring with the weight. The spring constant, k, is x_2- x_1 divided by the weight.

And then the potential energy, when the spring is compressed a distance x, is (1/2)kx^2.
 
^suppose I'm able to get the K constant, and thus the Force/Inch-of-compression for that spring. Is there a way I can plug into some equation and get how much potential energy is built up in the spring? My main goal is that I was hoping I could get some ideas for how to practically do this at home.
 
the method that HallsofIvy described should be practical to do at home

you just need a ruler and something with known mass or a scale
 
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