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Sheet Metal Fabrication Services — Complete Guide

Sheet metal fabrication is a manufacturing process that transforms flat metal sheets into functional parts and enclosures through cutting, bending, forming, and joining. It's widely used for enclosures, brackets, panels, frames, and structural components across industries.

This guide covers sheet metal processes, design guidelines, material selection, finishes, tolerances, and cost optimization.

Sheet Metal Fabrication Processes

Laser Cutting

A high-power laser beam cuts through metal sheet with precision. The most common cutting method in modern fabrication.

Laser type Best for Max thickness (steel) Edge quality
Fiber laser Most metals (steel, SS, Al, Cu, brass) 25mm (mild steel) Excellent — dross-free up to 12mm
CO2 laser Non-metal; good edge on thicker steel 20mm Good — slightly wider kerf

Advantages: High precision (±0.1mm), narrow kerf (0.1-0.3mm), no tooling cost, fast turnaround

Plasma Cutting

Uses an electrically conductive gas jet. Best for thicker plates where laser cost is prohibitive.

Waterjet Cutting

Uses high-pressure water (60,000 PSI) with abrasive garnet. Cuts any material without heat-affected zone (HAZ).

Punching & Forming

A CNC turret punch press creates holes, slots, louvers, and forms using interchangeable tooling.

Process Feature Typical tool
Punching Round holes, slots Round punch
Nibbling Irregular shapes Small rectangular punch
Louvering Airflow vents Louver tool
Countersinking Flush screw heads Countersink tool
Extruding Threaded holes Extrude tool
Embossing Raised features Emboss tool

Bending

CNC press brakes bend sheets along straight lines to form 3D shapes.

Bend type Description
Air bending Most common — punch does not bottom out
Bottom bending Sheet pressed into v-die — higher accuracy
Coining Punch forces material into die — highest accuracy, highest force

Welding & Assembly

Material Selection

Common Sheet Metals

Material Thickness range (mm) Strength Corrosion resistance Relative cost Typical use
Mild steel (DC01/SPCC) 0.5-6.0 Good Poor (needs coating) $ Enclosures, brackets, frames
Galvanized steel (DX51D/SGCC) 0.5-3.0 Good Good (zinc coating) $ Outdoor enclosures, ductwork
Stainless steel 304 0.5-6.0 Good Excellent $$$ Food equipment, medical, marine
Stainless steel 316 0.5-6.0 Good Superior $$$$ Chemical, pharmaceutical, coastal
Aluminum 5052 0.5-6.0 Moderate Good $$ Electronics, marine, automotive
Aluminum 6061 0.8-6.0 Good Good $$ Structural, aerospace (less formable than 5052)
Copper 0.3-3.0 Moderate Good $$$$ Electrical, decorative
Brass 0.3-3.0 Moderate Good $$$ Decorative, electrical

Design Guidelines

Minimum Bend Radius

Material Minimum bend radius (× thickness)
Mild steel (soft) 0.5-1.0×
Mild steel (hard) 1.0-2.0×
Stainless steel 1.5-2.5×
Aluminum 5052 0.8-1.5×
Aluminum 6061 2.0-3.0× (bends poorly, may crack)
Copper/Brass 0.5-1.0×

Hole & Slot Guidelines

Flange & Tab Guidelines

Relief Cuts

Surface Finishes

Finish Description Typical use Cost impact
Mill finish As-rolled surface Hidden parts, secondary operations None
Powder coating Durable colored coating Outdoor enclosures, machinery Medium
Paint (wet spray) Lower cost than powder Large parts, low volume Low-medium
Galvanizing (HDG) Hot-dip zinc coating Outdoor structures, lattice Medium
Anodizing Aluminum only, colored Electronics, cosmetics Medium
Brushed/grained Linear finish Decorative panels, appliances Low
Mirror polish High-gloss Architectural, decorative High
Passivation Stainless only Medical, food equipment Low
Electro-polishing Smooth, bright, clean Medical, pharmaceutical Medium

Tolerances

Feature Standard (±mm) Precision (±mm)
Laser cut dimensions 0.2 0.1
Punching 0.15 0.1
Bending angle ±1° ±0.5°
Fold-to-fold distance 0.25-0.5 0.15
Hole-to-edge after bending 0.35-0.5 0.2
Welded assembly 0.5-1.0 0.3-0.5

Cost Factors

Factor Cost impact Why
Material gauge 1.5-3× Thicker sheets require more power, heavier tooling
Complexity (bends) 1.2-2× Each bend needs handling time and setup
Tolerance 1.3-2× Precision requires slower feed, more checking
Quantity 1.5-5×/unit Setup cost spread; high volume = lower unit cost
Surface finish 1.2-3× Powder coating, plating, polishing add processes
Welding 1.3-2× Skilled labor, inspection, potential rework

Design for Manufacturing (DFM) Tips

  1. Use standard material gauges — custom gauges cost more and extend lead times
  2. Keep internal radii consistent — simplifies tooling, reduces setup time
  3. Avoid tight tolerances where possible — sheet metal naturally has more variation than CNC
  4. Design for nesting — efficient layout reduces waste; odd-shaped parts waste up to 30%
  5. Use the same thickness throughout an assembly — fewer material changes = lower cost
  6. Place tolerances on one side — bilateral tolerances are harder to hit than unilateral
  7. Add holes for assembly alignment — prevents welding distortion from pulling assemblies out of spec

Sheet Metal vs Alternative Processes

Factor Sheet Metal CNC Machining 3D Printing
Best quantity 10-10,000+ 1-1,000 1-100
Part envelope Large (2m+ panels) Limited by machine Limited by build volume
Strength-to-weight Excellent Good Moderate
Material options Limited (thin sheets) Extensive 20-50 polymers
Surface finish Post-processing needed Excellent out of machine Post-processing needed
Initial tooling cost Low (no mold) Low (no mold) None
Unit cost at 1,000 pcs Very low Moderate High

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