International Rollforms specializes in cost effective rollforming and roll forming parts. Metal rollforms for all industries. Manufacturing in New Jersey and Utah.
Roll
forming is a process that forms a continuous metal strip with roller dies into
a desired shape. Roll formed parts can have a variety of shapes, angles, and
curves. Roll forming can be used to form all kinds of ferrous and nonferrous
metals. The ability to roll form different types of metals allows the end
manufacturer multiple options to design products that best fit specific needs.
The roll
forming process is somewhat flexible. Certain design changes may strengthen and
improve the functionality of your roll formed parts. Roll forming allows
numerous other processes to be performed while the material is being formed. We
can eliminate multi-secondary work with our in-line capabilities. These roll
forming advantages allows International Rollforms to
produce many parts that would not be possible in other manufacturing
operations. Below are examples of cost effective conversations from other
processes that International Rollforms has
performed.
Stamping
to Roll form:
A metal
stamping that required 3 operations using 3 presses and 3 operators producing
250 parts per hour was converted to a roll formed part employing 1 operator
producing 50 parts per minute.
Extrusion
to Roll form:
A costly
aluminum extrusion requiring slow secondary punching that could not meet demand
was converted to a pre-punch roll formed part using hot dipped galvanized
steel. Increased part strength was obtained while costs were reduced by more
than half.
Roll
forming offers a number of distinct advantages over other metal fabricating
methods. Advantages include:
·
The
initial cost of a roll forming line is no more, and often less, than the cost
of a standard stamping line or progressive die operation.
·
Production
speeds of 50-600 feet per minute can be attained but 100-180 feet per minute is
a reasonable average for most current equipment.
·
Roll
forming is a high volume process that makes uniform and accurately dimensioned
parts.
·
Parts
are produced with little handling, minimizing labor costs, needing only the
coils to be loaded at the starting end of the machine and removal of finished
parts at the other end. This process can usually be handled with a minimal
number of operators.
·
Roll
forming can also be used for low-volume production because setup or changeover
time for new parts is not lengthy.
·
Maintenance
costs are generally low. The form rolls can produce several million feet of
product before problems occur when properly maintained.
·
The
roll forming process is easily combined with other operations and processes to
automatically form a considerable range of metal parts.
Another
advantage of rollforming is that the same rollforming machinery can be used to
produce a wide variety of cross section profiles. Each different profile
requires a specially designed set of rolls. The fundamental roll design
resembles a flower - i.e. a sequence of profile cross sections (one for each
set of rolls). Because rollforming is an exact operation and involves high
machinery costs, computer simulation is used in order to validate the design of
the roll stands to make sure that the metal product won't be stressed unduly,
and also to minimize the total number of rolls required. Examples of rollformed
applications include automobile chassis sections, window guides, and impact bars.
These can be prepunched, then rollformed, midpierced inline, rollformed some
more, and then welded and cut off in one continuous operation.
International Rollforms uses many different materials in
our metal roll forming process to manufacture a wide variety of roll formed
parts and shapes. Most metals can be roll formed. Complex roll form parts and
shapes can be made from basic cold roll steel to pre-coated material to
vinyl-laminated material with little complication.
Coated,
uncoated, ferrous, nonferrous, in mild to ultra-high strength steels from .005
stainless steel 1/4 hard, to electrolytic tough pitch full hard copper, to
70/30 brass to carbon steel 7 ga. high strength/low allow 60 ksi min. yield to
martensitic steel 160 ksi min. yield.
As in
pipe and tube mills, rollforming can be used with practically all metals,
nonferrous as well as ferrous. Coils of stainless steel, high strength and low
alloy steel, martensitic steel, as well as aluminum can be rollformed. It is
possible to emboss coils of aluminum or steel with finishes that simulate wood
grain (e.g. for garage doors). When using embossed metals the roller dies must
be adjusted so as not to roll out the embossment. Prepainted and vinyl
laminated sheets can also be rollformed but not welded. Rollforming is a
process of great versatility which permits innovative design. Setting a
rollforming system up requires a skilled rollform engineer's expertise, as well
as considerable collaboration between the manufacturer and the vendor in order
to develop a successful product.
You can Visit:
http://internationalrollforms.com
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