Oil canning is one of the most common — and most misunderstood — production quality disputes in the roll forming industry.
Customers often report:
Wavy flat sections
Visible surface distortion
Popping noises in decking panels
Rippling between ribs
Cosmetic waviness in roofing sheets
When oil canning appears in a new roll forming machine under warranty, the immediate argument begins:
Is this a machine defect — or a setup and material issue?
Suppliers often claim:
“Setup problem.”
Buyers often argue:
“Machine alignment fault.”
The truth is more technical.
This guide explains exactly what oil canning is, why it happens, how to diagnose it correctly, and how warranty responsibility is determined.
Oil canning refers to visible waviness or distortion in flat metal sections after roll forming.
It is most common in:
PBR panels
Box profile roofing sheets
Decking panels
Standing seam systems
Structural flat sections
It occurs when:
Internal stress is uneven
Material tension is inconsistent
Forming pressure is unbalanced
Coil stress is released unevenly
Oil canning is not always a machine defect — but it can be.
Oil canning affects:
Product appearance
Customer satisfaction
Commercial roofing contracts
Structural flatness
Installation performance
When it occurs on a brand-new machine, buyers may suspect:
Incorrect roll design
Shaft misalignment
Frame flex
Incorrect leveling
Uneven forming pressure
Suppliers often counter that:
Coil quality is the problem
Material gauge variation is causing stress
Operator pressure settings are incorrect
Responsibility depends on root cause.
Coil-related causes include:
Uneven internal tension
Residual rolling stress from mill
Variable thickness across width
High tensile strength variation
Coating tension differences
If oil canning appears before material enters forming stands, material may be at fault.
Material certification must be reviewed.
If coil is not properly flattened:
Internal stress remains
Uneven pressure develops during forming
Flat sections ripple
If machine lacks adequate leveling system, design responsibility may apply.
Incorrect stand adjustment may cause:
One side forming tighter than the other
Excess pressure in specific stands
Uneven stretching of metal
This is usually an operator setup issue.
If shaft alignment is incorrect:
Forming pressure becomes inconsistent
Load fluctuates during rotation
Flat sections deform
If runout exceeds tolerance in new machine, warranty responsibility may apply.
If machine frame flexes:
Stand alignment shifts
Pressure becomes uneven
Flat areas ripple
This is a structural design concern — not operator error.
Poor roll design may:
Over-stretch flat sections
Concentrate stress near ribs
Not distribute pressure evenly
If roll tooling was incorrectly engineered, manufacturer responsibility applies.
Oil canning is usually setup-related when:
Pressure adjustments were changed
Stands were not balanced
Material thickness changed
Coil supplier changed
Line speed was increased
Improper forming progression can stretch one side more than the other.
Fine-tuning pressure often resolves it.
Oil canning may qualify as a warranty defect if:
Machine shafts show measurable runout
Frame deflects visibly under load
Stands are not square from factory
Roll tooling geometry is incorrect
Leveling system insufficient for specification
If oil canning persists under correct setup and verified coil quality, design fault must be investigated.
Structured diagnosis prevents blame-based disputes.
Confirm:
Thickness uniformity
Tensile strength
Supplier certification
Surface flatness before forming
Check:
Roller alignment
Leveling pressure
Number of leveling rollers
Entry guide straightness
Confirm runout is within acceptable tolerance.
Use precision straight edge to confirm:
Stands square to base
No lateral shift
No uneven pressure marks
Reduce pressure in early stands.
Increase gradually.
Avoid over-forming in first half of machine.
A PBR machine produced visible oil canning within 2 months of installation.
Supplier claimed coil issue.
Independent evaluation found:
Shaft runout measured 0.09 mm (above tolerance)
Stand alignment slightly off on one side
Frame flex visible under load
Conclusion:
Manufacturing alignment issue.
Supplier corrected shaft alignment and reinforced frame under warranty.
Oil canning resolved.
Response:
Provide coil certification and demonstrate flatness before forming.
Response:
Document stand settings and show consistent adjustment.
Response:
Minor cosmetic rippling may occur, but structural flat distortion is not acceptable under design specification.
Before buying a roll forming machine:
Request roll design analysis
Confirm shaft tolerance specification
Confirm leveling system capability
Confirm frame rigidity data
Request sample production test video
Confirm maximum tensile strength rating
Good engineering documentation reduces disputes dramatically.
Operators may notice:
Increasing wave amplitude
Popping noises during forming
Variation between coils
Greater distortion at higher speed
Early intervention prevents structural issues.
No. It can result from coil stress, setup issues, or machine design.
Yes. Uneven tensile strength and internal stress are common causes.
Yes. Misalignment causes uneven forming pressure.
Absolutely. Structural deflection affects pressure distribution.
Only if caused by design defect or manufacturing fault.
Improper setup and uneven forming progression — but persistent issues may indicate deeper mechanical problems.
Oil canning is not automatically a warranty defect — and not automatically a setup problem.
Responsibility depends on:
Material quality
Leveling system performance
Shaft alignment
Frame rigidity
Roll design
Operator setup
If oil canning persists after proper setup and verified material, structural or alignment faults must be examined.
Without structured technical analysis, disputes become subjective.
With engineering documentation, liability becomes clear.
Copyright 2026 © Machine Matcher.