Coil Tagging & Traceability at the Roll Forming Line — Linking MTC to Production

Learn how to link coil tags and MTCs to roll forming production. Prevent warranty disputes and maintain full traceability at the line.

If you cannot trace a finished panel back to its original coil and heat number, you have:

  • Warranty risk

  • Compliance exposure

  • Claim vulnerability

  • Insurance weakness

  • Quality investigation delays

In modern roll forming operations, traceability must connect:

Mill Test Certificate (MTC / MTR)
Coil tag
Heat number
Production batch
Finished product

Without this chain, you cannot prove material origin or defend against disputes.

This guide explains:

✔ What traceability really means
✔ How to tag coils properly
✔ How to link MTC to machine production
✔ How to build a practical line-level system
✔ Common failures
✔ How to protect against claims

Traceability is not paperwork.

It is risk control.

1) What Is Traceability?

Traceability is the ability to:

Track material from raw steel melt → finished product → customer shipment.

At minimum, you must be able to answer:

Which coil produced this panel?

And:

Which heat number was in that coil?

2) Key Documents in the Chain

1) MTC / MTR (Mill Test Certificate)

Contains:

  • Heat number

  • Grade

  • Yield strength

  • Tensile strength

  • Elongation

  • Coating mass

  • Thickness

  • Chemical composition

This is the technical identity of the material.

2) Coil Tag

Attached to physical coil.

Typically shows:

  • Coil number

  • Heat number

  • Weight

  • Thickness

  • Width

  • Coating type

  • Production date

This connects physical steel to mill documentation.

3) The Traceability Chain

Proper traceability chain:

Mill → Heat Number → Coil Number → Line Production Order → Finished Batch → Customer Shipment

Break any link and traceability fails.

4) Tagging at Receiving

When coil arrives:

✔ Verify coil tag matches packing list
✔ Verify coil number matches MTC
✔ Photograph tag
✔ Record in inventory system

Never allow coil into production without verified documentation.

Quarantine if mismatch exists.

5) Tagging at the Uncoiler

When coil mounted:

Record:

✔ Date
✔ Time
✔ Machine number
✔ Operator
✔ Production order number
✔ Coil number
✔ Heat number

This connects material to production run.

Best practice:

Digital log entry at coil change.

6) Production Batch Linking

Every finished bundle should reference:

✔ Production order
✔ Machine ID
✔ Date
✔ Coil number

For structural or regulated markets, include:

Heat number reference.

If claim occurs months later, you must identify coil used.

7) Why Traceability Matters

Without traceability:

You cannot defend:

Thickness claim
Strength claim
Coating claim
Paint adhesion claim

Customer may blame:

Your forming process
When defect originated at mill.

Traceability protects your business.

8) Real-World Dispute Example

Customer claims:

Panel cracked during installation.

If you can show:

Heat number
MTC
Elongation data
Production date
Operator log

You can prove whether issue was:

Material quality
Handling error
Installation misuse

Without traceability:

You absorb the loss.

9) Manual vs Digital Systems

Manual System

Paper logs
Batch stickers
Printed MTC archive

Works for small plants — but error-prone.

Digital System

ERP or MES integration
Barcode scanning
QR-based coil tags
Automatic linking to production order

More reliable and scalable.

10) Barcode & QR Integration

Best practice:

Each coil tagged with barcode.

At uncoiler:

Scan coil → linked automatically to active production order.

Finished bundles labeled with:

QR referencing:

  • Coil number

  • Production date

  • Machine ID

Reduces human error.

11) Multiple Coils in One Order

If production order uses:

More than one coil.

System must record:

Start meter reading for coil A
End meter reading for coil A
Start meter reading for coil B

This ensures finished product can be segmented by coil.

Critical in long panel runs.

12) Slit Coil Traceability

If master coil slit into multiple widths:

Each slit coil must carry:

Parent coil reference
Original heat number

Never lose connection to original MTC.

Slitting facility must pass documentation downstream.

13) Painted Coil Traceability

Paint systems often have:

Batch number
Coating lot number
Top coat specification

For architectural work, paint lot traceability may be required.

Record paint system ID alongside coil heat number.

14) Regulatory & Structural Markets

Structural decking
Load-bearing purlins
Public infrastructure projects

Often require:

Full heat traceability.

In some markets, lack of traceability can void certification.

15) Storage & Tag Protection

Coil tags often:

Tear
Get oil-soaked
Become unreadable

Best practice:

Photograph tag upon receipt.
Store digital copy.
Protect physical tag during handling.

Never rely only on paper tag.

16) Common Traceability Failures

Operators forgetting to log coil change
Mixed bundles without batch marking
MTC not archived
Slit coil not labeled properly
Coil numbers handwritten incorrectly
Production orders reused without update

Most failures are procedural, not technical.

17) Best Practice SOP Summary

  1. Verify MTC upon arrival

  2. Log coil into inventory

  3. Photograph coil tag

  4. Scan coil at uncoiler

  5. Record start time and order

  6. Log coil change precisely

  7. Label finished bundles

  8. Archive documentation

  9. Maintain digital backup

Traceability must be systematic.

FAQ Section

What is an MTC?

Mill Test Certificate.

What is heat number?

Unique identifier for steel melt batch.

Should coil number be logged at line?

Always.

Is manual logging sufficient?

Only in small operations.

Should finished bundles reference coil?

Yes.

What if multiple coils used?

Log transition points.

Can lack of traceability void warranty?

Yes.

Should slit coils retain parent reference?

Absolutely.

Is traceability required for structural work?

Often mandatory.

Should coil tags be photographed?

Best practice.

Conclusion

Traceability connects:

Steel chemistry
Mechanical properties
Coating specification
Production batch
Customer delivery

Without it, you cannot:

Defend claims
Investigate failures
Prove compliance
Protect your margin

Coil tagging at the line is not paperwork.

It is:

Legal protection
Commercial protection
Quality control
Operational discipline

Professional roll forming plants build:

Digital linking
Operator logging
Bundle labeling
Secure documentation archive

Because when a claim comes 12 months later —

Your traceability system becomes your strongest defense.

Control documentation.

Control risk.

Control accountability.