Sheet metal fabrication is an umbrella term for a group of processes that use sheet metal to build machines and structures. It can be a complex process involving many different professionals. Businesses that specialize in sheet metal fabrication are commonly referred to as fabrication shops, or fab shops for short.
Types of Sheet Metal Fabrication Metals
Sheet metal can come in a wide variety of types, and fabrication can adapt the metal to whatever purposes you may need. Types of common metals used in sheet metal fabrication include:
- Steel. There is a multitude of types of steels for all sorts of purposes, but the metal as a whole is known for its durability and strength.
- Aluminum is more lightweight while also sharing some of steel’s strength. It’s good for lower temperatures, which partially accounts for its use in aerospace and refrigeration.
- Magnesium is a structural metal with a very low density, excellent for when stiffness is needed.
- Brass has useful acoustic properties, but is also used often for fittings and components. It is lightweight and corrosion-resistant.
- Bronze has a low melting point and is stronger than copper, with applications in coins, cookware, and turbines.
- Copper is ductile, malleable, and electrically conductive, as well as corrosion-resistant.
Sheet Metal Fabrication Processes
There are three main types of sheet metal fabrication: forming, cutting, and joining. We’ll outline each one.
Forming
Forming includes processes like stamping, bending, stretching, and roll forming. While cutting subtracts material from a piece of sheet metal, forming simply reshapes it to the desired contours.
- Stamping, uses single or progressive dies to press the metal into the desired form. The technique uses two dies with a sheet of metal pressed between them.
- Bending can be done either by press brakes or by hand.
- Stretching, as is implied in the name, pulls metal apart via stretcher, hammer and dolly, or English wheel.
- Roll forming has similar effects to bending. However in this process the entire sheet of metal passes through a pair of rolls to form the material into the right shape so it can be bent all along its length into a coil.
Cutting
There are two different types of cutting: with shear and without shear. Shear cutting includes processes such as shearing, cutting, and blanking. These types of cuts are more commonly used for nonindustrial end products, since they are less precise than processes without shear.
- Basic cutting uses a single blade to cut through the material.
- Blanking is a more powerful version of the same process a hole punch uses to cut out holes in paper. A machine punches shaped pieces out of a sheet of metal, and the leftover sheet is discarded.
- Shearing involves the same type of action as scissors, using upper and lower blades that make cuts in straight lines. However, with shearing, one blade remains stationary while the other lowers down.
Non-shear cutting, which is more accurate, is used specifically for industrial products like airplane wings. These processes include laser beam, plasma, and waterjet cutting services, as well as machining.
- Laser cutting uses a focused beam of light for cutting through or engraving the material.
- Plasma uses heated compressed gases like nitrogen and hydrogen, which exit the nozzle as such high speed they become ionized and conduct electricity.
- Waterjet cutting shoots high speed, concentrated streams of water filled with abrasives to erode a cut into the material.
- Machining uses a tool like a drill bit or lathe blade to cut off pieces of material. This can include processes like milling and spinning.