Coil direction is one of the most overlooked but critical setup factors in roll forming.
If coil direction is wrong, you can get:
Visible paint damage
Seam failure
Oil canning
Panel curvature
Tracking instability
Increased scrap
Three major orientation rules must always be confirmed before threading:
Paint orientation (paint out vs paint in)
Crown direction
Camber direction
Many production problems start with incorrect coil mounting — not bad tooling.
This guide explains:
✔ What paint out means
✔ What crown is and why it matters
✔ Camber orientation rules
✔ Practical setup checks
✔ Common mistakes
“Paint out” means:
The painted surface faces outward on the coil OD.
When mounted correctly:
The visible paint surface should face the correct direction during forming.
In roofing:
Top paint must face upward after forming.
If coil mounted incorrectly:
Paint may rub against guides
Burr may contact visible face
Seam geometry may invert
Panel orientation may reverse
Some machines are designed to run paint-out only.
Always confirm machine feed direction before mounting.
Coils unwind either:
Over the top
Under the bottom
Machine design determines required feed path.
Incorrect unwinding direction causes:
Reverse forming
Incorrect overlap leg
Seam misalignment
Before loading:
Confirm required unwind direction from tooling drawing.
Crown refers to:
Thickness variation across strip width.
The center may be slightly thicker than edges.
This is common in rolled steel.
Example:
Center = 0.51 mm
Edges = 0.49 mm
That 0.02 mm difference affects forming behavior.
Crown direction matters when:
Forming symmetrical profiles
Running tight tolerance standing seam
Producing precision purlins
If crown orientation inconsistent:
You may see:
Uneven rib height
One side oil canning
Asymmetrical forming pressure
Some plants always mark crown side.
Best practice:
Keep crown orientation consistent between coils.
Camber is:
Side-to-side curvature along strip length.
Strip does not run perfectly straight.
It curves slightly left or right.
Camber measured as:
Deviation from straight line over length.
If camber direction conflicts with machine tracking:
Strip walks to one side
Guide pressure increases
Edge scuffing increases
Roll wear increases
Proper camber orientation helps strip track naturally.
If strip curves left:
Mount so natural curve aligns with machine entry direction.
This reduces corrective side pressure.
Excessive side guide pressure increases:
Paint scratching
Edge damage
Roll marking
Camber orientation is a subtle but powerful adjustment.
Slit coil has:
Burr side
Non-burr side
In painted material:
Burr must not contact visible paint face during forming.
Wrong orientation causes:
Edge cracking
Paint lifting
Visible seam defects
Confirm burr direction before mounting.
Standing seam systems are very sensitive to:
Camber
Crown
Paint direction
Seam interlock tolerances are tight.
Small orientation mistake causes:
Seam lock difficulty
Uneven snap engagement
Visible panel bow
Always confirm orientation before high-speed run.
For C & Z purlins:
Crown can affect:
Hole alignment
Flange symmetry
Structural dimension tolerance
Camber may cause:
Misalignment at cut-to-length stage.
Proper orientation reduces post-forming correction.
Before threading:
✔ Confirm paint face direction
✔ Confirm unwind direction (over/under)
✔ Check burr side
✔ Identify camber direction
✔ Mark crown if known
✔ Align coil accordingly
Take 2 minutes before starting.
Save hours of scrap later.
Mounting coil reversed
Ignoring burr direction
Not checking camber
Mixing crown direction between coils
Assuming all coils unwind same way
Running painted coil upside down
Most orientation errors happen during shift change.
Lay straightedge along strip edge.
Observe curvature.
If edge curves toward operator:
Camber is inward.
Mark coil before mounting.
Measure thickness at:
Left edge
Center
Right edge
Small variation indicates crown.
Not always critical — but important in precision work.
✔ Standing seam
✔ Architectural panels
✔ High gloss PPGI
✔ Structural Z purlins
✔ Tight seam interlock profiles
Less critical for:
Simple AG panel (but still recommended).
Painted surface on outer coil face.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Always.
Yes.
Yes.
Best practice.
Yes.
It should be.
Coil orientation is not cosmetic.
It affects:
Tracking
Surface quality
Seam geometry
Dimensional accuracy
Scrap rate
Three checks before threading:
Paint direction
Crown consistency
Camber alignment
Most roll forming defects blamed on tooling actually begin at coil mounting.
Correct orientation costs nothing.
Incorrect orientation costs material, time, and credibility.
Control direction before production.
Forming starts with how you mount the coil.
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