Roll forming

The roll forming process transforms a flat sheet section into a special profile by incremental bending of the flat section through a series of contoured and profiled rolls into the final complex section geometry. The sheet metal is usually coil fed but can also be from a blank. Coil roll forming lines produce much more complex profiles than blank fed lines which are normally prototype lines or wide format roll forming for simple parts. Very precise, complex cross-sections can be produced consistently, allowing very tight tolerances, superior surface finishes and long length final parts.

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Method

In free bending, the plate rests on the upper edges of the die for the entire duration of the cycle. The required bending radius is dependent on the material grade, die width and punch radius. The die gap width can be adjusted. In bottoming, the stroke length is sufficient for the punch to press the plate entirely against the die. A profile matching that of the punch and die is formed in the plate. Air bending (free bending) in V-shaped dies is the most frequently used method.

When bending, the outside of the sheet material is stretched and the inside is compressed. The strain increases as the bending radius is reduced. The bendability of the material is therefore normally given as the minimum bending radius without failure.

Springback is caused by elastic strain. The springback increases with the yield point, the strain hardening and the die width. The influence of the yield point is greatest. Springback reduces with a reduction of the bending radius. Overbending is used to compensate for the spring back effect.

There can be a natural deflection that occurs in the upper part and lower elements of a press brake due to the resistance forces. The higher the bending force, the larger the deflection can become to the extent of a crowning effect and potentially a gap along the bending length between the upper and lower beam, which is largest in the middle and decreases towards the support frames. If the longitudinal gap is left without correction when the sheet or quarto plate is press bended it will not get the same angle throughout the length of the machine. A crowning system compensates for the elastic deflection of the bending machine allowing this gap to be minimized, giving better results over the length of the machine. In modern press brakes there is normally an automatic crowing system included that will minimize such effects. This is especially important when press bending high strength steels where final part quality is critical and part rejection must be close to zero with material costs.

method

Roll forming features

Benefits

  • For large series roll forming is much more cost efficient than press brake bending
  • Long lengths with very accurate tolerances can be achieved
  • More complex profiles can be produced compared to press brake bending
  • Sharper radii can be achieved through roll forming of high strength steel than during press brake bending

Drawbacks

  • Not possible for few parts. Minimum a slit coil is needed
  • High investment cost
  • High cost for tooling
  • Limited part size (width and depth) of the individual process line(s)

Recommendations

Roll forming is suitable for large series repeatable production with minimum volumes usually in excess of the equivalent of 20,000kg of parts from up to 800mm wide incoming strip feedstock.

Roll forming

Our offer

SSAB can offer roll forming services from our own centers globally and in addition we have a service partner network that can be utilized. Our offer includes:

  • Heavy duty roll forming lines
  • Lengths up to 21,000mm
  • Thickness < 12.5mm
  • Strip width max 800mm

In many of our service centers we have the possibility to combine roll forming of parts with other metal processing methods, for example tube laser cutting, to fulfil your complete requirements.

our offer