RBMECH123,
The manual selection of a spring support requires two itms of information - the load to be carried and the expected thermal movement. There are other data like allowable force variation of the spring, minimum movement for selection, available space to install spring support, and the working range of force and travel of a particular spring unit - but the load and movement are primary.
You could obtain the support load value from a weight analysis of the piping or approximate value from adding up the weights of pipe, fittings, flanges, valves, and fluid content. The thermal movement could be approximated from calculation of thermal expansion of piping and equipment connections.
The manual selection of spring unit for the load and thermal movement will be a lookup of values in the spring manufacturer's table. One commonly used table is the Anvil International Co. (successor to Grinnell Corp.)
download their 'Pipe Hanger Catalog PH-2006' and the table on pages 134-135 shows the loads and movements that their spring supports will provide, as well as more instructions.
The CaesarII spring selection parameters include a threshold minimum travel, 'Rigid Support Displacement Criteria' which can be set different from the default value of 0.1 inch, for which the spring selection reverts to 'Rigid'. Why use a spring support when the piping does not move? So it will revert to a rigid suppport.
Another spring selection outcome is 'Constant spring' if the allocated space is less than the dimensions of a selected spring hanger or spring can. Also the selection outcome of 'Constant spring' is result of the force variation (travel X spring rate) being greater than the specified allowable variation, usually 25% by default but could be reset to allow more variation or less variation to control the maximum / minimum forces from a spring unit.
Now you should appreciate using CaesarII to let the software select the spring. Instead of clicking the box for 'Restraint', you click the box for 'Hanger', enter the node number to locate and identify the spring hanger, and enter any other information. Set up the analysis load cases to include the spring hanger loads (CaesarII is able to construct and recommend the load cases for you), and run the analysis. Done.
If you want to input your manual selection values for a spring, then you provide 'Predefined Hanger Data' in the input fields at bottom after entering the hanger node number. The input of spring rate is required along with either the cold installation load or constant effort support load.