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Oct . 28, 2025 11:30 Back to list

Tube Mill Production Line | High-Speed, Precision, Turnkey



What Really Matters When You Choose a Tube Mill Production Line

I’ve walked more mills than I can count, and—to be honest—the best ones don’t shout about speed, they whisper about stability. The market trend right now is clear: smarter forming, faster coil handling, and data-driven QC. It sounds buzzwordy, I know, but when you see a coil change drop from 25 minutes to under 10, you don’t argue with results.

Interestingly, a great Tube Mill Production Line almost always starts with a great slitting section. That’s why this vendor’s “Hot sale slitting production line” caught my eye: according to the spec, it runs around 120–150 m/min and sits about 30 m end to end with two buffer pits. In practice, stable slit-edge quality means fewer weld defects downstream—operators mention this a lot.

Process Flow (real-world view)

Coils arrive, get checked (ID/OD, width, certs), then:

  • Slitting: burr control and edge wave matter; they feed directly into the Tube Mill Production Line.
  • Uncoiling & accumulation: two buffer pits help keep tension steady.
  • Forming: breakdown → fin → sizing passes; HF welding (most common) or laser, depending on grade/thickness.
  • Bead scarfing, cooling, straightening.
  • Non-destructive testing (eddy current or ultrasonic), length measuring, flying cut-off.
  • Bundling, stamping, traceability, and packing.

Materials, specs, and test standards

Typical materials: low-carbon steels (Q195–Q345), galvanized, stainless (201/304/316L), occasionally high-strength low-alloy. Reference standards often include ASTM A513/A787, EN 10219/10305, and ISO 15548 for eddy current NDT. Weld procedure qualifications follow ISO 15614-1 or AWS D1.1 depending on customer policy. Service life? Roll tooling usually 12–24 months (≈, depends on schedule and grade), HF contact tips are consumables, and saw blades vary widely by cut rate.

Product specification snapshot (slitting, feeding the mill)

Item Specification (≈ real-world)
Line name Hot sale slitting production line
Designed role Pre-process for Tube Mill Production Line (edge quality + width consistency)
Speed ≈120–150 m/min (material/width dependent)
Overall line length ≈30 m
Buffer pits Two (for tension stability)
Origin Room B1106, Zhongliang Plaza, No.345 Youyi North Street, Xinhua District, Shijiazhuang, Hebei

Vendor comparison (shortlist I keep handy)

Vendor Slitting speed Integration with mill After-sales Certs Warranty
Yingyee ≈120–150 m/min Good (buffer pits + tension control) Remote + on-site (region dependent) ISO 9001 (typical), CE (models vary) ≈12 months
Vendor A ≈100–130 m/min Standard Email-first ISO 9001 6–12 months
Vendor B ≈140–160 m/min Strong (MES-ready) 24/7 hotline ISO 9001, CE 12–24 months

Where it’s used (and what operators say)

Industries: furniture tubing, HVAC (duct/pipe), auto components, construction scaffolding, agriculture, and, with proper standards, line pipe. Many customers say the big gains come from fewer unplanned stops—surprisingly, not just top speed. A senior operator told me, “Keep slit edges clean and tension steady and the Tube Mill Production Line behaves like a different machine.”

Quality & testing, quickly

  • Dimensional checks per EN 10305/ASTM A513 tolerances.
  • Weld NDT: eddy current (ISO 15548) or UT; weld macroetch to verify penetration.
  • Mechanical tests: tensile and flattening as per order spec (e.g., mild steel yield ≈235 MPa by grade).
  • Surface: visual (ISO 8501-1 reference) and burr height checks from slitting.

Customization that actually matters

Consider quick-change cassettes, HF power sizing for high-strength steels, oil-mist control, and an inline measurement bridge. Integrating coil data from slitting to the Tube Mill Production Line can auto-adjust forming passes—small thing, big payoff.

Case note from Hebei

A HVAC tube shop in Hebei integrated a fast slitting section (≈120–150 m/min) ahead of its mill. They reported smoother welds and less bead tear-out on thin-gauge galvanized. Changeovers felt easier, and scrap trended down week over week—no drama, just steadier outputs.

Citations

  1. ASTM A513: Standard Specification for Electric-Resistance-Welded Carbon and Alloy Steel Mechanical Tubing.
  2. EN 10305: Steel tubes for precision applications — Technical delivery conditions.
  3. ISO 15548: Non-destructive testing — Equipment for eddy current examination.
  4. ISO 15614-1: Specification and qualification of welding procedures for metallic materials.

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