How Thickness Affects Developed Width in Roll Forming
Yes — thickness directly affects developed width.
How Thickness Affects Developed Width
Complete Engineering Explanation for Roll Forming
1️⃣ The Short Answer
Yes — thickness directly affects developed width.
It does not change flat segment lengths.
It changes bend allowance, and bend allowance changes total developed width.
More thickness = more bend allowance = larger developed width.
2️⃣ Where Thickness Appears in the Formula
Developed width formula:
Developed Width=∑(Flats)+∑(Bend Allowance)\textbf{Developed Width} = \sum(\text{Flats}) + \sum(\text{Bend Allowance})Developed Width=∑(Flats)+∑(Bend Allowance)
Bend allowance formula:
BA=π180×A×(R+Kt)BA = \frac{\pi}{180} \times A \times (R + Kt)BA=180π×A×(R+Kt)
Thickness (t) appears inside:
(R+Kt)(R + Kt)(R+Kt)
As thickness increases, bend allowance increases.
Across many bends, this becomes significant.
3️⃣ Why Thickness Increases Developed Width
When sheet metal bends:
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Outside fibers stretch
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Inside fibers compress
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Neutral axis shifts
Thicker material:
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Has more material to stretch
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Produces larger arc length
That arc length is bend allowance.
So thicker sheet requires more flat material.
4️⃣ Example: Same Profile, Different Thickness
Assume:
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20 bends
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Bend angle = 90°
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Radius = 1.0 mm
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K = 0.40
Case 1 — 0.40 mm Thickness
R+Kt=1+(0.40×0.40)R + Kt = 1 + (0.40 × 0.40)R+Kt=1+(0.40×0.40)
=1+0.16=1.16= 1 + 0.16 = 1.16=1+0.16=1.16
BA=1.57×1.16=1.82mmBA = 1.57 × 1.16 = 1.82 mmBA=1.57×1.16=1.82mm
Total BA:
1.82 × 20 = 36.4 mm
Case 2 — 0.60 mm Thickness
R+Kt=1+(0.40×0.60)R + Kt = 1 + (0.40 × 0.60)R+Kt=1+(0.40×0.60)
=1+0.24=1.24= 1 + 0.24 = 1.24=1+0.24=1.24
BA=1.57×1.24=1.95mmBA = 1.57 × 1.24 = 1.95 mmBA=1.57×1.24=1.95mm
Total BA:
1.95 × 20 = 39.0 mm
Difference
39.0 − 36.4 = 2.6 mm increase
Just from 0.20 mm thickness increase.
On complex profiles, difference may be larger.
5️⃣ Why This Matters in Roofing
Roofing profiles may run:
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0.42 mm
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0.48 mm
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0.55 mm
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0.60 mm
If blank width is fixed but thickness changes:
Finished geometry will drift.
- Seam tension changes.
- Rib height shifts.
- Cover width varies.
Blank width should be optimized for thickness range.
6️⃣ Thickness & Standing Seam Sensitivity
Standing seam panels are highly sensitive.
Small developed width change causes:
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Seam loose
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Seam tight
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Mechanical lock stress
Architectural systems require precise thickness-specific blank width.
7️⃣ Thickness Also Influences Radius
In roll forming:
Thicker material often forms with:
Larger effective radius.
If radius increases along with thickness:
Bend allowance increases even more.
So thickness affects developed width in two ways:
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Directly through Kt
-
Indirectly through radius change
8️⃣ Steel Grade Interaction
Higher strength steel (G550 vs G250):
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Springs back more
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Often requires larger forming radius
Larger radius increases BA.
So:
Thickness + Grade together influence developed width.
9️⃣ What Happens If You Ignore Thickness Change?
If you use same coil width for:
0.42 mm and 0.60 mm
You may see:
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Rib distortion
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Edge stress
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Seam misalignment
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Width variation
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Oil canning
Production stability decreases.
🔟 When Thickness Effect Becomes Significant
Thickness effect becomes more important when:
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Profile has many bends
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Profile includes hems
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Profile includes seam folds
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Structural deck systems
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Deep rib trapezoidal sheets
Profiles with 20–40 bends amplify thickness impact.
1️⃣1️⃣ Tolerance Consideration
Mill thickness tolerance may be:
±0.02–0.05 mm
This slightly affects BA.
Over many bends, tolerance stack-up can influence final dimensions.
High-end architectural systems monitor thickness carefully.
1️⃣2️⃣ Practical Production Strategy
Best practice:
- ✔ Calculate developed width for thickest material
- ✔ Validate through first-article trial
- ✔ Record optimized blank width per thickness
- ✔ Lock into production SOP
Do not assume one blank width fits all thicknesses.
1️⃣3️⃣ Does Thickness Change Flat Segments?
No.
Flat segment lengths stay same dimensionally.
Only bend development changes.
Important distinction.
1️⃣4️⃣ Thickness vs Gauge Confusion
Gauge is not precise.
Always calculate using millimeters (BMT).
Gauge varies by country and coating.
Using gauge leads to blank width errors.
1️⃣5️⃣ Machine Engineering Implications
If developed width increases:
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Roll face width must support it
-
Entry guide must accommodate it
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Shear clearance must allow it
Thicker material may require slightly wider machine capacity.
1️⃣6️⃣ Engineering Summary
Thickness affects developed width through:
R+KtR + KtR+Kt
More thickness = more bend allowance = larger coil width.
Effect magnitude depends on:
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Number of bends
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Radius
-
K-factor
-
Steel grade
Ignoring thickness impact causes geometry drift.
Correct developed width calculation must always include thickness.
FAQ Section
Does thickness always increase developed width?
Yes, assuming same radius and geometry.
Is the change large?
Individually small per bend, but significant across many bends.
Should I calculate different blank widths per thickness?
Yes, especially for precision profiles.
Does thicker steel require larger radius?
Often yes, which further increases developed width.
Does thickness affect effective cover width?
Indirectly through geometry drift if blank width not adjusted.
Is thickness effect important in corrugated?
Less critical than fold-heavy profiles, but still present.