Oil canning in roll formed panels is often blamed on:
Material thickness variation
Residual stress
Roll pressure imbalance
Pass design issues
While these are valid mechanical causes, many cases of oil canning — especially intermittent or speed-dependent oil canning — originate from electrical instability.
In high-speed roll forming lines, even small variations in strip speed or tension caused by electrical issues can introduce:
Micro-compression zones
Localized stretching
Uneven strain distribution
These stress variations manifest visually as oil canning.
This guide focuses specifically on electrical causes of oil canning related to speed instability and drive control issues.
Oil canning occurs when:
The panel experiences uneven longitudinal stress.
In roll forming, stress consistency depends on:
Stable strip feed speed
Stable roll engagement speed
Consistent tension control
Smooth acceleration & deceleration
If motor speed fluctuates — even slightly — strain distribution changes.
Electrical instability directly affects speed stability.
The main forming motor is typically controlled by a VFD.
If VFD output fluctuates:
Strip feed tension changes
Roll forming strain becomes uneven
Compression zones develop
Oil canning increases
Causes of speed fluctuation:
Poor tuning
No vector control
Low torque reserve
Voltage instability
Harmonics
Monitor real-time motor speed variation.
If motor nameplate parameters are incorrectly programmed:
Torque response unstable
Slip compensation incorrect
Speed regulation poor
Result:
Micro-speed variations under load.
Re-commission drive with proper motor auto-tune.
Incorrect motor configuration is common in imported machines.
When forming thin pre-painted or high tensile material:
If motor lacks torque stability:
Speed dips under forming load
Tension fluctuates
Panel flatness compromised
Low torque margin causes unstable material flow.
Harmonics in electrical supply can create:
Torque ripple
Motor vibration
Micro-speed oscillations
Speed ripple introduces periodic stress variation in strip.
Install:
Line reactors
DC chokes
Harmonic filters
Poor power quality contributes to flatness defects.
In systems using analog speed reference (0–10V or 4–20mA):
Unstable 0V reference causes:
Speed drift
Reference fluctuation
Motor instability
Measure analog signal stability under load.
Shield analog cable properly.
Closed-loop vector drives depend on encoder feedback.
If encoder signal unstable:
Speed feedback inaccurate
Drive compensates incorrectly
Torque oscillates
Oscillating torque creates stress waves in material.
Use shielded differential encoder wiring.
Loose incoming terminals cause:
Voltage drop under load
Micro-interruptions
Speed fluctuations
Inspect and torque-check:
Main breaker
MCCB
Drive input terminals
Motor terminals
High-current instability leads to uneven forming.
If one phase carries significantly higher load:
Motor torque fluctuates cyclically.
Torque imbalance translates into:
Uneven roll pressure
Strip tension variation
Surface distortion
Measure phase current balance.
Imbalance >2–3% can influence forming consistency.
During shear activation or high forming load:
If supply voltage dips:
Motor speed may momentarily drop.
Short voltage dip = sudden strain variation.
Install voltage logger to confirm.
If ramps too aggressive:
Sudden torque changes
Strip tension spikes
Stress concentration
Even subtle ramp instability affects panel appearance.
Set ramp profiles smoothly for thin gauge material.
In systems with frequent deceleration:
If brake resistor absent or undersized:
Drive may limit deceleration or fluctuate torque.
Torque inconsistency affects panel stress distribution.
If hydraulic pump motor speed unstable:
Roll pressure may fluctuate.
Electrical causes:
Separate unstable VFD
Poor control voltage
Incorrect pump motor sizing
Pressure variation creates stress inconsistency in strip.
In systems using PLC-based speed synchronization:
If scan time slow:
Speed command response lags.
Lag causes minor oscillation in drive control loop.
Use high-priority tasks for speed control logic.
Electrical oil canning typically:
Worsens at high speed
Appears inconsistent
Changes with drive tuning
Improves when speed reduced
Mechanical oil canning typically:
Constant pattern
Independent of speed
Repeatable at same pass
Understanding pattern helps identify cause.
Measure:
Motor RPM variation
Torque oscillation
Current fluctuation
Analog reference stability
Look for:
Periodic oscillation → harmonic issue
Random fluctuation → voltage instability
Speed lag under load → torque limitation
Use drive monitoring tools.
Poor VFD tuning
Incorrect motor parameters
Encoder noise
Harmonic distortion
Voltage dips
Phase imbalance
Analog reference instability
Loose high-current terminals
Most oil canning blamed on tooling may be electrically induced.
Use vector control drives
Properly tune motor
Install line reactors
Separate analog and power cables
Shield encoder cables
Maintain phase balance
Monitor torque ripple
Electrical stability supports surface quality.
When purchasing a roll forming machine, verify:
Drive type (vector control preferred)
Motor torque margin adequate
Harmonic mitigation included
Encoder feedback properly shielded
Analog signals shielded and grounded correctly
Phase balance tested during commissioning
Ramp settings documented
Power quality compatibility confirmed
Red flags:
“No auto-tune performed.”
“No line reactor installed.”
“Single-ended encoder used.”
Surface quality depends not just on tooling, but on electrical stability.
Yes, through speed and torque variation.
Higher load amplifies torque instability.
Yes, via torque ripple.
Check electrical stability before mechanical changes.
Yes, even short dips affect tension.
Poor VFD tuning and unstable speed control.
Electrical causes of oil canning in roll forming machines are primarily linked to:
Speed instability
Torque oscillation
Encoder feedback errors
Harmonic distortion
Phase imbalance
Voltage dips
Analog reference instability
Panel flatness is directly related to consistent strain distribution.
Consistent strain requires stable motor speed and torque.
In high-speed roll forming operations, electrical stability is just as critical as tooling design for producing flat, visually acceptable panels.
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