Deep Drawn Pressings -

As the metal is bent and stretched, it undergoes "work hardening." The walls of a deep drawn part become stronger than the original sheet metal. You get a part that is lightweight but incredibly rigid.

We live in a world obsessed with 3D printing and CNC machining. But when you need to produce 50,000 identical, seamless, incredibly strong metal enclosures at lightning speed, nothing beats a punch press and a die. deep drawn pressings

Deep drawing creates a part from a single piece of metal. There are no welds, seams, or joints. This makes the part watertight, airtight, and structurally sound under high pressure. As the metal is bent and stretched, it

A deep draw press can produce 30 to 60 parts per minute. Once the tooling is paid for, the unit cost drops to pennies. Compare that to a CNC machine taking 15 minutes per part. But when you need to produce 50,000 identical,

Looking for a supplier? Always ask potential vendors for their "drawability ratio" (blank diameter / punch diameter). A ratio above 2.5 usually requires multiple draws.

When you look at a stainless steel kitchen sink, a fuel tank for a car, or the outer casing of a lithium-ion battery, you are looking at a "deep drawn pressing." Despite the name sounding like a niche industrial process, deep drawing is the unsung hero of modern manufacturing.

Let’s pull back the curtain on the fascinating world of deep drawn pressings. In simple terms, deep drawing is a sheet metal forming process. A flat "blank" of metal is placed over a die. A punch pushes the metal into the die cavity, forcing the flat sheet to take on a three-dimensional shape.