Presses
Presses are used in most areas of industrial applications. Industrial presses (metalworking) use a ram to shear, punch, form, or assemble metals or other materials by cutting, shaping, or using dies attached to slides. There are many different types of equipment. Examples include die cutting machines, forming and bending machines, punch presses, shop presses, sheet metal equipment, stamping presses, and wire forming machines. Operational method, technology, force and pressure specifications, and speed and stroke specifications are important parameters to consider when selecting industrial presses. Machines differ in terms of features and certifications.
Selecting industrial presses (metalworking) requires an understanding of equipment types. For example, die cutting presses are used in the manual conversion of web or sheet materials such as woven cloth, non-woven textiles or rubber sheeting. Clicker presses and rotary die cutter are designed for die cutting operations. Forming machines are used to form or bend metal sheets and plates. Shop presses are suitable for general-purpose applications. Wire forming presses are designed or suitable for wire forming or wire bending operations. Specialized industrial presses are also available.
Industrial presses (metalworking) include punch presses, machines that use a set of dies under pressure to put holes into materials to shape metal parts. Industrial presses such as the stamping press operate stamping and other types of dies by powering the opening and closing of die sets, which are composed of punches and die blocks. Die sets assemble upper and lower die shoes, guide pins, bushings, and punch and die holders. Stamping presses fabricate components from sheet metal via blanking, piercing or punching, forming, bending and drawing.
Common Types
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