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Bending (metalworking)

Metal bending redirects here. For the form of stage


magic, see Spoon bending.
Bending is a manufacturing process that produces a

Press brake
Bending
electrical enclosures and rectangular ductwork.

1 Process

Bending process

In press brake forming, a work piece is positioned over


the die block and the die block presses the sheet to form
a shape.[1] Usually bending has to overcome both tensile
stresses and compressive stresses. When bending is done,
the residual stresses cause the material to spring back to-
a chimney starter a sample product of bending wards its original position, so the sheet must be over-bent
to achieve the proper bend angle. The amount of spring
V-shape, U-shape, or channel shape along a straight axis back is dependent on the material, and the type of form-
in ductile materials, most commonly sheet metal.[1] Com- ing. When sheet metal is bent, it stretches in length. The
monly used equipment include box and pan brakes, brake bend deduction is the amount the sheet metal will stretch
presses, and other specialized machine presses. Typi- when bent as measured from the outside edges of the
cal products that are made like this are boxes such as bend. The bend radius refers to the inside radius. The

1
2 2 TYPES

formed bend radius is dependent upon the dies used, the the punch and the side wall of the V is greater than the
material properties, and the material thickness. material thickness (T).
The U-punch forms a U-shape with a single punch.[1] Either a V-shaped or square opening may be used in the
bottom die (dies are frequently referred to as tools or
tooling). Because it requires less bend force, air bending
tends to use smaller tools than other methods.
2 Types
Some of the newer bottom tools are adjustable, so, by us-
ing a single set of top and bottom tools and varying press-
stroke depth, dierent proles and products can be pro-
duced. Dierent materials and thicknesses can be bent
in varying bend angles, adding the advantage of exibil-
ity to air bending. There are also fewer tool changes, thus,
higher productivity.[2]
PUNCH
A disadvantage of air bending is that, because the sheet
does not stay in full contact with the dies, it is not as pre-
cise as some other methods, and stroke depth must be
WORKPIECE kept very accurate. Variations in the thickness of the ma-
terial and wear on the tools can result in defects in parts
BACK GAUGE produced.[2]
Air bendings angle accuracy is approximately 0.5 deg.
Angle accuracy is ensured by applying a value to the width
of the V opening, ranging from 6 T (six times material
thickness) for sheets to 3 mm thick to 12 T for sheets
DIE more than 10 mm thick. Springback depends on material
properties, inuencing the resulting bend angle.[2]
Depending on material properties, the sheet may be over-
bent to compensate for springback.[3]
Air bending does not require the bottom tool to have the
same radius as the punch. Bend radius is determined by
A schematic of coining with a backgauge. material elasticity rather than tool shape.[2]
The exibility and relatively low tonnage required by air
There are three basic types of bending on a press brake,
bending are helping to make it a popular choice. Qual-
each is dened by the relationship of the end tool posi-
ity problems associated with this method are countered
tion to the thickness of the material. These three are Air
by angle-measuring systems, clamps and crowning sys-
Bending, Bottoming and Coining. The conguration of
tems adjustable along the x and y axes, and wear-resistant
the tools for these three types of bending are nearly iden-
tools.[2]
tical. A die with a long rail form tool with a radiused
tip that locates the inside prole of the bend is called a The K-Factor approximations given below are more likely
punch. Punches are usually attached to the ram of the ma- to be accurate for air bending than the other types of
chine by clamps and move to produce the bending force. bending due to the lower forces involved in the forming
A die with a long rail form tool that has concave or V process....
shaped lengthwise channel that locate the outside prole
of the form is called a die. Dies are usually stationary
and located under the material on the bed of the machine. 2.2 Bottoming
Note that some locations do not dierentiate between the
two dierent kinds of dies (punches and dies.) The other In bottoming, the sheet is forced against the V opening
types of bending listed use specially designed tools or ma- in the bottom tool. U-shaped openings cannot be used.
chines to perform the work. Space is left between the sheet and the bottom of the V
opening. The optimum width of the V opening is 6 T
(T stands for material thickness) for sheets about 3 mm
2.1 Air bending thick, up to about 12 T for 12 mm thick sheets. The bend-
ing radius must be at least 0.8 T to 2 T for sheet steel.
This bending method forms material by pressing a punch Larger bend radius require about the same force as larger
(also called the upper or top die) into the material, forcing radii in air bending, however, smaller radii require greater
it into a bottom V-die, which is mounted on the press. forceup to ve times as muchthan air bending. Ad-
The punch forms the bend so that the distance between vantages of bottoming include greater accuracy and less
2.7 Rotary bending 3

springback. A disadvantage is that a dierent tool set is 2.7 Rotary bending


needed for each bend angle, sheet thickness, and material.
In general, air bending is the preferred technique.[2] Rotary bending is similar to wiping but the top die is
made of a freely rotating cylinder with the nal formed
shape cut into it and a matching bottom die. On contact
with the sheet, the roll contacts on two points and it ro-
2.3 Coining
tates as the forming process bends the sheet. This bending
method is typically considered a non-marking forming
In coining, the top tool forces the material into the bottom
process suitable to pre-painted or easily marred surfaces.
die with 5 to 30 times the force of air bending, causing
This bending process can produce angles greater than 90
permanent deformation through the sheet. There is lit-
in a single hit on standard press brakes process.
tle, if any, spring back. Coining can produce an inside
radius is as low as 0.4 T, with a 5 T width of the V open-
ing. While coining can attain high precision, higher costs 2.8 Roll bending
mean that it is not often used.

2.4 Three-point bending

Three-point bending is a newer process that uses a die


with an adjustable-height bottom tool, moved by a servo
motor. The height can be set within 0.01 mm. Adjust-
ments between the ram and the upper tool are made us-
ing a hydraulic cushion, which accommodates deviations
in sheet thickness. Three-point bending can achieve bend
angles with 0.25 deg. precision. While three-point bend-
ing permits high exibility and precision, it also entails
high costs and there are fewer tools readily available. It is
being used mostly in high-value niche markets.[2]

Roll bending
2.5 Folding
Main article: Roll bending
In folding, clamping beams hold the longer side of the
sheet. The beam rises and folds the sheet around a bend The roll bending process induces a curve into bar or plate
prole. The bend beam can move the sheet up or down, workpieces. There should be proper pre-punching al-
permitting the fabricating of parts with positive and neg- lowance.
ative bend angles. The resulting bend angle is inuenced
by the folding angle of the beam, tool geometry, and ma-
terial properties. Large sheets can be handled in this pro- 2.9 Elastomer bending
cess, making the operation easily automated. There is
little risk of surface damage to the sheet.[2] In this method, the bottom V-die is replaced by a at pad
of urethane or rubber. As the punch forms the part, the
urethane deects and allows the material to form around
the punch. This bending method has a number of advan-
2.6 Wiping
tages. The urethane will wrap the material around the
punch and the end bend radius will be very close to the
In wiping, the longest end of the sheet is clamped, then actual radius on the punch. It provides a non-marring
the tool moves up and down, bending the sheet around bend and is suitable for pre-painted or sensitive materi-
the bend prole. Though faster than folding, wiping has als. Using a special punch called a radius ruler with re-
a higher risk of producing scratches or otherwise damag- lieved areas on the urethane U-bends greater than 180
ing the sheet, because the tool is moving over the sheet can be achieved in \ ne hit, something that is not possible
surface. The risk increases if sharp angles are being pro- with conventional press tooling. Urethane tooling should
duced. Wiping on press brakes.[2] be considered a consumable item and while they are not
This method will typically bottom or coin the material to cheap, they are a fraction of the cost of dedicated steel.
set the edge to help overcome springback. In this bending It also has some drawbacks, this method requires tonnage
method, the radius of the bottom die determines the nal similar to bottoming and coining and does not do well on
bending radius.Manual setup anges that are irregular in shape, that is where the edge
4 3 CALCULATIONS

of the bent ange is not parallel to the bend and is short The neutral line (also called the neutral axis) is an imag-
enough to engage the urethane pad. inary line that can be drawn through the cross-section of
the workpiece that represents the locus where no tensile
nor compressive stresses are present on the work. Its lo-
2.10 Joggling cation in the material is a function of the forces used to
form the part and the material yield and tensile strengths.
In the bend region, the material between the neutral line
and the inside radius will be under compression during
the bend. The material between the neutral line and the
outside radius will be under tension during the bend.
Bend allowance and bend deduction are quantities used
to determine the at length of sheet stock to give the de-
sired dimension of the bent part. Both bend deduction
and bend allowance represent the dierence between the
neutral line or unbent at pattern (the required length of
the material prior to bending) and the formed bend. Sub-
tracting them from the combined length of both anges
gives the at pattern length. The question of which for-
mula to use is determined by the dimensioning method
used to dene the anges as shown in the two diagrams
below.
A joggle bend in sheet metal and a joggling tool
3.1 Bend allowance
Joggling,[4] also known as joggle bending, is an oset
bending process in which the two opposite bends are each The bend allowance (BA) is the length of the arc of the
less than 90 (see following section for how bend angle neutral line between the tangent points of a bend in any
is measured), and are separated by a neutral web so that material. Adding the length of each ange taken between
the oset (in the usual case where the opposite bends are the center of the radius to the BA gives the Flat Pattern
equal in angle) is less than 5 workpiece thicknesses.[5] Of- length. This bend allowance formula is used to determine
ten the oset will be one workpiece thickness, in order to the at pattern length when a bend is dimensioned from
allow a lap joint which is smooth on the 'show-face'. 1) the center of the radius, 2) a tangent point of the radius
or 3) the outside tangent point of the radius on an acute
angle bend..
3 Calculations The BA can be estimated using the following formula,
which incorporates the empirical K-factor:[7]
Many variations of these formulas exist and are readily
available online. These variations may often seem to be ( )
at odds with one another, but they are invariably the same BA = A (R + (K T ))
180
formulas simplied or combined. What is presented here
are the unsimplied formulas. All formulas use the fol-
lowing keys:
3.2 Bend deduction
Lf = at length of the sheet
The bend deduction BD is dened as the dierence be-
BA = bend allowance tween the sum of the ange lengths (from the edge to
BD = bend deduction the apex) and the initial at length. The outside set back
(OSSB) is the length from the tangent point of the radius
R = inside bend radius to the apex of the outside of the bend. The bend deduc-
tion (BD) is twice the outside setback minus the bend al-
K = K-Factor, which is t / T lowance. BD is calculated using the following formula,
where A is the angle in radians (=degrees*/180):[8]
T = material thickness

t = distance from inside face to the neutral line[6] A


BD = 2 (R + T ) tan BA
A = bend angle in degrees (the angle through which 2
the material is bent) For bends at 90 degrees this formula can be simplied to
5

how much sheet metal one needs to leave for the bend in
t order to achieve particular nal dimensions, especially for
between the straight sides next the bend. Use the known
k-factor and the known inner bending radius to calcu-
C late the bending radius of the neutral line. Then use the
B neutral bending radius to calculate the arc length of the
neutral line (circumference of circle multiplied by the
A bend angle as fraction of 360deg). The arc length of
NEUTRAL the neutral line is the length of the sheet metal you have
R LINE to leave for the bend.
The following equation relates the K-factor to the bend
allowance:[9]

BA
B T
R + BA
C K=
A/180
T
The following table is a Rule of Thumb. Actual results
may vary remarkably.
t The following formula can be used in place of the table as
a good approximation of the K-Factor for Air Bending:

B
log(min(100, max(20R,T
T
)
))
OSSB K=
2 log(100)
A
NEUTRAL
R LINE 4 Advantages
Bending is a cost eective process when used for low to
medium quantities,
APEX OSSB T
B
5 See also
Diagram showing standard dimensioning scheme when using Bending (mechanics)
Bend Deduction formulas.
Tube bending
Press brake

BD = R (2 A) + T (2 KA) Brake (sheet metal bending)


Bending machine (manufacturing)

3.3 K-factor Hemming and seaming


Automotive Hemming
K-factor is a ratio of location of the neutral line to the ma-
terial thickness as dened by t/T where t = location of the
neutral line and T = material thickness. The K-Factor for-
mulation does not take the forming stresses into account 6 References
but is simply a geometric calculation of the location of
the neutral line after the forces are applied and is thus [1] Manufacturing Processes Reference Guide, Industrial
the roll-up of all the unknown (error) factors for a given Press Inc., 1994.
setup. The K-factor depends on many factors including [2] F., M. (August 2008), Press Brake Bending: Methods
the material, the type of bending operation (coining, bot- and Challenges (PDF), Metalforming: 3843.
toming, air-bending, etc.) the tools, etc. and is typically
[3] Tool and Manufacturing Engineers Handbook, Volume 2,
between 0.3 and 0.5.
Forming, 4th Edition, Society of Manufacturing Engi-
In sheet metal design, the K-factor is used to calculate neers, 1984
6 7 EXTERNAL LINKS

[4] 3-81. DRAW FORMING Archived August 20, 2010, at


the Wayback Machine.

[5] http://www.toolingu.com/
definition-410130-35505-joggle-bend.html

[6] Archived copy (PDF). Archived from the original


(PDF) on 2010-02-24. Retrieved 2010-02-24.

[7] How to Calculate Bend Allowance for Your Press Brake,


archived from the original on 2010-02-24, retrieved 2010-
02-24.

[8] Sheet metal bend deduction, archived from the original on


2010-02-24, retrieved 2010-02-24.

[9] Diegel, Olaf (July 2002), BendWorks (PDF), archived


from the original (PDF) on 2010-02-24, retrieved 2010-
02-24.

6.1 Bibliography
Benson, Steve D. Press Brake Technology: A Guide
to Precision Sheet Metal Bending. Society of Man-
ufacturing Engineers, 1997. ISBN 978-0-87263-
483-1
Todd, Robert H.; Allen, Dell K.; Alting, Leo (1994),
Manufacturing Processes Reference Guide, Industrial
Press Inc., ISBN 0-8311-3049-0.

7 External links
Latang, Paul. Bending Made Easy Fabricating &
Metalworking, February 2010.
Bend allowance and deduction calculator
7

8 Text and image sources, contributors, and licenses


8.1 Text
Bending (metalworking) Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bending_(metalworking)?oldid=782758438 Contributors: Bender235,
The wub, DVdm, Chris Capoccia, Brotulix, SmackBot, Jokl, Gilliam, Borowski~enwiki, Kleuske, Tompot~enwiki, Peter Horn, Wiz-
ard191, Iridescent, Cydebot, Thijs!bot, Serpents Choice, JAnDbot, Rich257, Violask81976, A Nobody, Biscuittin, Roesser, Yintan, RFN-
EFF, Flyer22 Reborn, Svick, Denisarona, Slightlymighty, AlanBottomley, DumZiBoT, WikHead, SilvonenBot, Download, OlEnglish,
Luckas-bot, Rubinbot, B137, Materialscientist, Raulshc, Waterman67, Kierkkadon, Mstrogo, Strano.m, EmausBot, , Wilhkar,
Dissymmetry, Liamwillco, Geredog, ClueBot NG, Jnorton7558, ForwardChange, Mmarre, Helpful Pixie Bot, Pmayer05, LCS check, Ma-
cyber, Ginsuloft, Pokemaster3421, KH-1, JamesP, Oluwa2Chainz, CLCStudent, InternetArchiveBot, Eno Lirpa, GreenC bot, Makertum,
Magic links bot and Anonymous: 94

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