What Is Sheet Metal Fabricating? JRPanel Will Tell You! Part 1

 

So you’re new to sheet metal. Perhaps you’re fresh out of engineering school and need to design a modulator bracket for your employer’s next greatest karaoke system, or you’ve been assigned to the purchasing department and need to source those same parts. The problem is, you don’t know where to start. Should you have them laser-cut and bent on a press brake, stamped in a progressive die, or punched and welded? Precision sheet metal fabrication offers tremendous flexibility, and it’s often difficult for even experienced hands to determine the most cost-effective manufacturing process.

 

Everyone has to start somewhere, though, so lets begin with the term fabrication.” Merriam Webster defines it as to construct from diverse and usually standardized parts.” This terse description is technically accurate, but its also far too vague, and could be applied just as well to IKEA furniture as it can to the modulator bracket with which youve been tasked. For our purposes, fabrication is the process by which skilled people cut, bend, punch, form, notch, shear, stamp, weld, and assemble sheet metal into usable shapes. Lets start with the first of these: cutting.

 


Cutting It Up

 

Laser cutters are high-tech machines that convert 4 x 8 ft. or 5 x 10 ft. sheets of metal up to an inch or so thick into precision-cut parts and part blanks. These might then be sent to a press brake, stamping press, welder, or insertion machine for any number of secondary operations (all of which you will learn about in Part II of Learn Up: Precision Sheet Metal Fabrication) or directly to a customer.


 


As their name implies, laser cutters are equipped with a high-power laser. Two types exist—the traditional CO2 laser and the newer solid-state or fiber laser. Each has its strengths and weaknesses, although fiber lasers have largely taken over the industry due to their greater speed and lower maintenance costs. Some boast lasers of 10-kW (kilowatt) or more, with machines growing more powerful each year.

 


For thinner materials in particular, they’re much faster than competing methods, and perhaps most importantly, require none of the tooling needed on most other machine tools. All that’s needed is plenty of electrical power and a stream of “assist” gas to clear molten material from the 1/32″ wide kerf. Simply program the machine to trace out whatever part shapes are needed, load a sheet of material, and fire up the beam.

 

Water Down And Fire Up

 

It should be noted that several alternatives to laser cutting exist, although none fall into the precision sheet metal category. The first of these is abrasive water jet, often abbreviated to AWJ. It uses tiny bits of abrasive—usually garnet, a type of rock found in beach sand and mines throughout the world—entrained in a piano-wire wide stream of pressurized water to cut metal up to 8 in. or more in thickness.

 

Nor can plasma cutters, even though they’re significantly faster than waterjet and even lasers on certain materials. Known as the fourth state of matter, plasma is most often created by sending an electrical current through a swirling, high-speed stream of gas such as nitrogen or argon. Get that gas hot enough and it ionizes, creating plasma, which can then be used to cut steel, aluminum, and other metals up to a couple of inches thick. It’s a relatively low-cost process but its accuracy is nowhere near that of laser-cutting, so is generally used for construction, ship building, and salvage work.

 

Punching It Out

 

The only downside to laser, plasma, or AWJ cutting is its two-dimensional nature. Enter the turret punch press, which can not only cut out flat parts but generate shallow features such as louvers, knockouts, and lances. They are similar in size, shape, and function to a laser cutter. Rather than using a beam of coherent light to cut metal, however, turret punches drive a male punch through a piece of sheet metal up to 3/8″ thick, give or take, into the female die below. If youve ever used a three-ring paper punch, you get the idea.

 

This allows turret punches to generate round holes, squares, rectangles, and pretty much whatever shape has been ground into the punch and die (which must always match). By moving the sheet metal slightly with each stroke of the ram, turret punches can nibble contours within the workpiece, or even cut it out entirely from the sheet. And when used with special tooling, turret punches can also emboss shapes in the workpiece surface, or to cut and form the louvers and other shallow shapes just mentioned.



Granted, each of the preceding sections are gross oversimplifications of highly technical processes, but hopefully there was enough there to get your mental wheels turning. In the second part of “Learn Up: Precision Sheet Metal Fabrication,” we’ll cover other processes such as bending, forming, welding, hardware insertion, and assembly, but for now, let’s go back to our modular bracket.

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