The arrival of a sheet metal piece from the design table to the production bench was a process that took weeks decades ago, based on hand-drawn technical drawings, molds prepared by trial and error and the intuition of experienced craftsmen. Today, the same process can be completed within hours. The most powerful technology behind this transformation: CAD-CAM.

What is CAD-CAM?

CAD-CAM refers to the combined use of two separate but complementary technologies:
CAD (Computer-Aided Design) enables the modeling of product and part geometries in a computer environment, either in 2D or 3D. Designers and engineers draw, analyze, and verify the part to be manufactured on the screen with millimeter precision.
CAM (Computer-Aided Manufacturing)takes the geometry from CAD and produces automatic machining paths (toolpath) for equipment such as CNC machine tools, laser cutting machines, wire EDM and milling machines. It tells the machine "what to do" through code language.
CAD-CAM integration is a seamless combination of these two processes on a single software platform: production preparation begins as soon as the design is completed, errors caused by human intervention and data transfer are minimized.

Why CAD-CAM? The Weaknesses of Traditional Methods

In the traditional manufacturing process, the bridge between design and production was based on hand-written measurement notes, 2 Dec technical drawings and the interpretation of an experienced operator. Each interpretation step was a potential source of error.
CAD-CAM bridges this gap:
  • The design data is directly converted into machine code; there is no difference in interpretation.
  • Changes are made to the design, and all processing routes are automatically updated
  • Different material and workbench combinations are tested in a virtual environment
  • Prototype costs decrease; the probability of obtaining accurate results on the first part increases
  • Knowledge becomes an institutional asset; the departure of an experienced master does not result in critical knowledge loss

How Does CAD-CAM Work in Sheet Metal and Mold Making?

Design Phase (CAD)

The part geometry received from the customer — in STEP, IGES, DXF, or PDF format — is imported into the CAD environment. The part is analyzed for manufacturability:
  • Are the bending radii appropriate for the sheet metal thickness?
  • Are the hole-to-edge distances sufficient?
  • Has the springback value been taken into account?< / li>
  • What does the flat pattern (opening) show the net waste rate?< / li>
After these analyses are completed, the mold design phase begins: the punch, die, stripper plate, pressure plate, and guide elements are modeled in 3D. Strip layout is optimized for progressive molds.

Production Preparation (CAM)

Once the CAD model is approved, it is transferred to the CAM software. At this point, the engineer defines the following parameters:
  • Machine tool selection: CNC milling, wire EDM, EDM, laser cutting, water jet
  • Tool selection: End mills, drills, cutting tips and their geometries
  • Machining strategy: Roughing, semi-finishing, finishing sequence
  • Cutting parameters: Feed rate, RPM, depth of cut
  • Clamping arrangement: How the part will be held on the machine
With these parameters, the CAM software automatically calculates all cutting paths and generates NC/G-code. Before the code is loaded into the machine tool, collision checks are performed using virtual simulation; risks of tool breakage or collision with the workpiece are eliminated.

Production (CNC Machining)

The NC code is transferred to the machine. The machine executes the program step by step. The operator’s role is to check installation accuracy, perform initial part measurement, and monitor the machine throughout the process. All repetitive geometric operations are automated.

Contributions of CAD-CAM to the Sheet Metal and Mold Industry

Precision and Repeatability

CNC machines operate with micron-level precision. There is no dimensional difference between the first piece and the hundredth piece. This precision in mold components extends mold life, improves sheet metal quality, and reduces maintenance frequency.

Complex Geometries

Complex 3D surfaces that are impossible to process by hand, deep drawing molds and free-surface forming elements become producible thanks to GLASS.

Speed ​​and Flexibility

When customer requirements change, only the CAD model is updated; CAM automatically calculates new machining paths. There is no need to start from scratch.

Waste and Rework Reduction

Thanks to virtual simulation, errors are detected before going to the workbench. The scrap rate resulting from improper processing of expensive mold steel drops dramatically.

Data Management and Traceability

The CAD model and CAM program of each part are archived. To begin production of the same part years later, no design from scratch is required; existing data is updated and production commences.

Major Software Used in Sheet Metal CAD-CAM

Software Usage Area
SolidWorks + SolidCAM Sheet metal part design and CNC machining
Siemens NX Mold design, advanced CAM, 5-axis machining
CATIA + DELMIA Automotive molds, surface modeling
CREO + Creo Manufacturing Parametric mold design, CAM integration
Mastercam Powerful CAM for CNC milling and turning
AutoForm Sheet metal forming simulation (CAE integration)
Trumpf TruTops / Bysoft Special CAM for laser and panel bending machines
Radan Sheet metal nesting (layout optimization) and bending CAM

Nesting: The Digital Key to Raw Material Efficiency

In sheet metal production, raw material costs constitute a significant portion of the total cost. Nesting is an optimization process in which CAM software arranges parts on sheet metal with minimal waste.
Advanced nesting algorithms:
  • Arranges different parts together on the same sheet metal
  • Produces automatic plans based on sheet metal size, thickness, and material type
  • Optimizes cutting paths in terms of both time and energy consumption
  • Can reduce the defect rate by up to thirty percent

The Digital Process Chain: Beyond CAD-CAM

CAD-CAM is at the core of the digital process chain in modern manufacturing. The other links in this chain are as follows:
CAE (Computer-Aided Engineering): Used for sheet metal forming simulation, FEA analysis, and FLD calculation; directly integrated with the CAD model.
PLM (Product Lifecycle Management): Manages product data from design through production, maintenance, and end-of-life recycling.
ERP Integration: Production times and material quantities from CAM are directly transferred to the ERP system, enabling cost calculation and production planning.
Digital Twin: A virtual model of a physical copy of a mold or machine tool; monitors the production process in real time and provides data for preventive maintenance.

Conclusion

CAD-CAM is one of the key determinants of competitiveness in the sheet metal forming and mold making sector. This technology, which connects design and production to a single digital stream, reduces errors, shortens delivery times, enables complex geometries and converts human information into corporate data.
The combination of Decently experienced engineering know-how and a strong CAD-CAM infrastructure means faster offer, higher quality parts and shorter delivery time to the customer. Both sides of this equation that makes a difference in mold making are indispensable.
This article is intended for engineers and production professionals working in the fields of sheet metal processing, mold design, and CNC manufacturing.