If you’ve been hunting for a speed 70m/min drywall roll forming machine that doesn’t flinch at continuous production, you’re in the right place. The “Hot sale Omega drywall roll forming machine” from Yingyee—based at Room B1106, Zhongliang Plaza, No.345 Youyi North Street, Xinhua District, Shijiazhuang, Hebei—has been popping up in my inbox for months. Contractors and OEMs keep mentioning one thing: “no-stop cutting that actually works in real life.”
The headline is simple: servo-controlled tracking cut, gearbox-driven roll stations, and a high/stable 70 m/min line speed. In practice, that means fewer micro-stops, better length accuracy, and fewer burr complaints from installers. The frame (they call it “torrist structure,” an in-house term) is rigid enough to keep straightness in check during long runs. To be honest, that stiffness is what usually separates decent lines from the finicky ones.
Decoiler → Leveling → Servo punching (if configured) → Roll forming (omega profile) → Servo tracking moving cutting (no-stop) → Runout table → Bundle/strap. Materials: GI/GL coils (typically EN 10346 or ASTM A653), 0.4–1.0 mm thickness for drywall studs/tracks. Lubrication is light; gearboxes handle the heavy lifting. QC checks usually include:
| Line speed | Up to 70 m/min (continuous, no-stop cut) |
| Cutting | Servo tracking moving cutting; hydraulic shear, low-burr |
| Drive | Dirven by gearbox (station-to-station torque stability) |
| Structure | High and stable “torrist” frame (factory term), heavy-duty stands |
| Material | GI/GL coils, ≈0.4–1.0 mm; yield 230–350 MPa typical |
| Controls | Servo PLC/HMI, encoder length-control, recipe library |
| Profiles | Omega and compatible drywall studs/tracks (customizable) |
Interior drywall framing plants, prefab housing modules, distribution centers making OEM-branded studs, and even some regional contractors who brought roll-forming in-house. Many customers say the speed 70m/min drywall roll forming machine pays back faster when paired with automated bundling.
Options include in-line punching, quick-change spacers, and coil car. Certifications typically requested: ISO 9001 QMS, CE (Machinery Directive), and electrical safety to IEC norms. Material incoming per ASTM A653 or EN 10346; general tolerances often verified against ISO 2768.
| Vendor | Strengths | Watch-outs |
|---|---|---|
| Yingyee (Hebei) | No-stop servo cut at 70 m/min; gearbox drive; stable frame; reasonable lead times | Confirm spare-parts stocking and remote support hours |
| Vendor A (EU) | Strong CE documentation; tight tolerances; premium PLC stacks | Higher capex; longer delivery in peak season |
| Vendor B (Local integrator) | On-site service fast; easy spare logistics | Top speed often ≤ 35–45 m/min; more stops for cutting |
A Southeast Asia prefab outfit swapped two older lines for one speed 70m/min drywall roll forming machine. After a cautious first month, they hit ≈1.2–1.4 km/day of omega sections with length deviation under 0.8 mm at 3 m. Operators liked the HMI recipes; maintenance flagged only routine roller cleaning. Service life? With decent coil quality and routine gearbox oil checks, you’re looking at 8–10 years before major overhauls, in my experience.
If your bottleneck is stop-start cutting and inconsistent straightness, this machine’s servo tracking cut and gearbox backbone are genuinely practical upgrades. It seems that, surprisingly, the value shows up most in reduced rework and packaging efficiency rather than just raw speed.