ISMR July/August 2025 | Page 48

FOCUS ON ROLL FORMING

SHAPING PROFILES

Roll forming is considered a highly cost-effective way to produce robust, multi-functional shapes in large quantities. We outline the benefits of the process for manufacturers.

“ Roll forming can incorporate cutting, punching and other secondary operations inline, eliminating the need for additional, separate processes that may consume more energy.”
Custom roll-formed sections.
Image: Metsec.

Roll forming is a process used for shaping metals such as steel, stainless steel and solid non-ferrous metals such as nickel, titanium and copper. It is a continuous process which converts sheet metal into an engineered shape using consecutive sets of mated rolls, each of which makes only incremental changes in the form. The sum of these small changes in form is a complex profile.

In roll-formed parts, only a small amount of forming strain is put into the part during each station and even here, only a small section is bent at any given time. Because of this, more complex shapes can be achieved with an appropriately designed roll forming process. Roll forming has applications in many industry sectors including energy; construction; furniture; automotive; appliances; agriculture; solar and racking.
The roll-forming process not only produces typical shaped sections( such as channel, angle, boxes and round tube) but also forms more complex profiles required for demanding technical solutions. consecutive forming stations, each of which nudges the metal towards the desired shape. Based on the targeted profile, a computer calculates the optimal placing and shape of the rollers for maximum efficiency and designs the track. The more advanced the desired shape, the more rollers the material goes through. The roll-forming line can bend metal, form metal into tubes, create metal maze-like structures and punch the metal with holes during the process,” outlined materials specialist, National Material Company( NMC).
“ The rollers are precision-contoured metal dies that shape the incoming sheet metal. In most cases, they are also the powered drive rolls that pull the strip through the roll-forming unit. These rollers can be as simple as the cylindrical rollers used to roll luggage through airport scanners, or they can take on more intricate shapes. After the final forming station, the strip is sheared to the ordered product length. Typically, no additional work is needed before shipment, since the final form has been achieved,” it added.
Each pair of rollers further forms the metal strip until it reaches the desired cross-sectional shape at the end of the line, ready to be cut into the appropriate length. The more complex the profile shape, the more pairs of rollers required. The finished form is generally referred to as a rolled profile, roll-formed( custom) profile, custom profile, steel profile, tube or metal section.
“ In addition to open profiles, closed crosssections can also be produced with rollforming. With joining technologies, such as laser welding and HF welding, the metal strip’ s edges are brought together and welded shut. This is done as an integral part of roll forming, so that steel tubes with complex closed crosssections can be produced cost-effectively,” added roll forming specialist, Welser Profile.
Counting the benefits
The roll-forming process
“ In the forming process, a coil or long individual strips are fed through a roll forming line which converts the flat sheet into a contoured cross-sectional profile. The unique aspect of this approach is the use of
Image: STAM.
Roll-forming line for cable trays and covers.
There are multiple advantages to rollforming. Because of the“ assembly line” efficiency of roll forming, long lengths of metal can be produced and cut in large quantities, which reduces cost. Secondary processes( such as punching or even welding) can be integrated into a single production line.
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