500C heatgun didn't seem to remove the springiness on the compressed coils on my m90
Not even if I tried to get it to settle afterwards by compressing it for a week inside a torch
It was nowhere near cherry colour tho, it did darken the bright shiny metal a little (could just be surface grease)
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I guess the 20 FPS loss from removing the bearing is actually because the rotational friction on the non-bearing side is slowing its decompression
Try playing with a spring by hand, but twist it or keep it from spinning, the twisting itself is going to affect it wants to expand/compress, in fact you can try to compress/decompress the spring by the twisting alone
You need 800+Celcius to anneal springs, stainless is higher.
The 20FPS loss is because the spring is less pre compressed, there's no extra friction in having 1 bearing instead of 2. I'm going to explain why because it's come up before.
If you compress a spring one end will rotate with respect to the other and if you have a bearing at one end, that end will rotate freely because bearings have less friction than the spring rubbing against another flat surface and once the bearing is rotating there is not enough force to rotate at the other end. The whole spring is not rotating, the wire is repositioning itself as it is put in torsion, so if it is fixed at one end the other rotates.
In Airsoft we have bearings not for friction issues, but so that the spring maintains its shape and does not bend to one side or the other when it gets compressed. You could fix the spring at both ends and have no frictional losses but you would still have the spring deforming as it compresses.
If you put a bearing at both ends and lets say, one bearing is a bit stiffer than the other, then the bearing with the least friction will rotate first, but the other bearing will not rotate because the force to rotate it never gets high enough since it is relieved by the first bearing to rotate. This is essentially what happens if you have just one bearing.
Remember that if the spring is fixed at one end there are no frictional losses, as it doesn't move.
Friction also doesn't care about area, only the force and coefficient of friction. So if you have a bearing at both ends the friction is double that of one bearing, since the force at both ends of the spring is the same. If only one bearing rotates, the friction is halved. Because the angle the spring rotates is double with 1 bearing the same amount of losses occur. Both bearings need to rotate of course for this to be true.