Transforming a flat sheet of metal into the desired geometry is a critical manufacturing process where force, time, and material knowledge converge. Behind virtually every metal part produced — from automotive and white goods to defense and energy — lies sheet metal forming technology.

What Is Sheet Metal Forming?

Sheet metal forming is the collective term for manufacturing processes in which metal sheets are permanently plastically deformed into specific shapes and dimensions. Dozens of sub-processes fall under this heading, including cutting, bending, deep drawing, embossing, piercing, and flanging.
The underlying principle is straightforward: the stress applied to the material exceeds its yield strength, and the material solidifies retaining its new shape. At this point, material selection, die design, and the correct definition of process parameters directly determine the outcome.

Core Sheet Metal Forming Methods

  • Blanking / Punching: Obtaining a part or hole of the desired shape from a sheet. The clearance between punch and die determines cut quality.
  • Bending: Bringing sheet material to the desired angle around a specific axis. Springback is calculated and the die angle is compensated accordingly.
  • Deep Drawing: Drawing a flat sheet blank into a cylindrical, rectangular, or complex-form cup. Wall thickness control and tearing risk are critical parameters.
  • Embossing: Localized forming applied to create a shape or text on the sheet surface.
  • Flanging: Folding part edges to create structural rigidity or a joining surface.
  • Roll Forming: Continuously converting sheet into a profile by passing it through successive pairs of rollers.

Material Selection in Sheet Metal Forming

Not every sheet material exhibits the same formability. The key parameters to evaluate for correct material selection are:
  • n value (Strain hardening exponent): A high n value ensures uniform thinning during forming and improves deep drawing performance.
  • r value (Anisotropy coefficient): A high r value improves wall thickness preservation in deep drawing and flanging processes.
  • Elongation percentage: Determines the risk of cracking during forming.
  • FLD (Forming Limit Diagram): A critical analysis tool that visually displays the forming limits of the material.
Commonly used sheet materials include cold-rolled steel (SPCC, DC04), high-strength steel (AHSS, UHSS), galvanized sheet, stainless steel, aluminum alloys, and copper.

Forming Simulation: Seeing Defects Before the Die Is Built

Today, software such as AutoForm, Pam-Stamp, and DYNAFORM runs the sheet metal forming process in a virtual environment. Through simulation:
  • Tearing and wrinkling zones are identified in advance
  • Blank holder force and blankholder pressure are optimized
  • Springback is calculated and die geometry is corrected
  • Different material and thickness combinations are tested
  • The need for die revision is minimized
This approach significantly reduces expensive physical prototype costs, especially in deep drawing dies and automotive body panels.

Press Force and Machine Selection

Selecting the right press during the forming process is critical for die life and part quality. Parameters to evaluate:
Parameter Description
Nominal force (ton) Whether the press capacity meets the force required for forming
Stroke length Sufficient travel distance for the depth of deep drawing
Bolster size Compatibility with die dimensions
Working speed (spm) Strokes per minute for serial production
Blank holder force Wrinkling control in deep drawing and flanging dies

Quality Control: Critical Measurements After Forming

Leading methods used for quality verification of formed parts:
  • CMM (Coordinate Measuring Machine): Comparing part geometry against the CAD model
  • Optical scanning: Surface deviations and form errors
  • Inked part / oil paint test: Visualizing contact points and forming distribution
  • Wall thickness measurement: Determining thinning and tearing risk

Conclusion

Sheet metal forming is an advanced engineering discipline where correct material knowledge, precise die design, and optimized process parameters work as a unified whole. Incorporating simulation tools and CAD-CAM integration into this process guarantees both first-time-right part production and consistency in serial manufacturing.
At Avcı Kalıp, with the experience we have accumulated since 1960 and our modern infrastructure, we provide reliable solutions for sheet metal forming projects of every scale and complexity.
This article has been prepared for engineers and manufacturing professionals working in sheet metal processing and die design.