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Sheet Metal Stamping

Controlled Forming for Functional Metal Parts

Sheet Metal Stamping as a Manufacturing Process

Sheet metal stamping is not simply about shaping metal.
It is a controlled forming process where material behavior, die design, and press operation must work together consistently.

When properly designed and executed, stamping enables high-efficiency production of metal parts with reliable dimensions, repeatable quality, and stable mechanical performance.

Our stamping capability is focused on functional parts intended for real production, not experimental forming.

Tooling and Die Design Focused on Stability

Stamping quality begins with tooling.

We design and manufacture stamping dies with attention to:

  • Material thickness and temper
  • Cutting and forming clearances
  • Metal flow and stress distribution
  • Tool wear and maintenance access

Die structures are selected based on part geometry, production volume, and dimensional requirements, rather than complexity for its own sake.

Cutting and Forming Operations

Stamping operations typically involve cutting, forming, or a combination of both.

Common cutting operations include:

  • Blanking
  • Punching
  • Trimming

Forming operations are selected based on part function and material behavior, including:

  • Bending
  • Drawing
  • Flanging
  • Hemming

Each operation is evaluated not only for feasibility, but for long-term repeatability during production.

Progressive and Multi-Stage Stamping

For higher volume or more complex parts, multiple operations are integrated into a single production flow.

Depending on part size and structure, we apply:

  • Single-station dies for simpler components
  • Progressive dies for continuous, high-volume production
  • Transfer or multi-stage setups for larger or deeper drawn parts

The objective is to balance efficiency, control, and tooling durability.

Material Behavior and Formability

Successful stamping depends heavily on material properties.

We consider:

  • Formability and elongation limits
  • Springback behavior
  • Risk of thinning, wrinkling, or cracking
  • Surface condition requirements

Stamping parameters and die features are adjusted to control material flow and minimize forming defects.

From Tooling to Production

Stamping trials are used to validate:

  • Part geometry and dimensional stability
  • Edge quality and forming consistency
  • Tool alignment and wear behavior

Issues identified at this stage are addressed before full production, reducing downstream quality risks.

What You Can Expect From Our Stamping Capability

  • Repeatable metal parts with stable dimensions
  • Tooling designed for production, not experimentation
  • Controlled forming processes
  • Clear transition from trial to mass production

Sheet metal stamping delivers value only when it is treated as a system, not a single operation.
That is how we approach it.

Good stamping is not defined by force or speed.

It is defined by control and consistency.

That is the standard we work to.

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