Roll forming bends sheet metal through successive roll stations to create precise profiles. Using steel, stainless steel, and aluminum with hardened roll tooling, it produces structural parts, tubes, frames, and construction profiles with high accuracy and repeatability.
Roll forming is a continuous metal‑forming process in which a strip or coil of sheet metal passes through a series of precisely aligned roll stations that gradually bend it into a desired profile. Each station applies incremental deformation, minimizing internal stresses and ensuring tight dimensional tolerances. The process supports steel, stainless steel, aluminum, and high‑strength low‑alloy (HSLA) grades, chosen for their formability and final strength requirements. Tooling consists of hardened, advanced Cold Work Tool Steels and HSS roll sets, stands, shafts, and guides designed to withstand cyclic loading and abrasive wear. Advanced tooling may include quick‑change roll cassettes, integrated punching units, cutoff dies, and inline welding systems for tube and structural profiles. Process parameters such as feed speed, roll alignment, and lubrication are critical for surface quality and profile accuracy. Roll‑formed products are widely used in automotive structures, construction components, window and door frames, shelving systems, rails, tubes, and energy‑sector support profiles due to their high consistency, efficiency, and cost‑effectiveness in long‑run production.