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Oct . 18, 2025 11:25 Back to list

High Frequency Welded Tube Making Machine - Fast, Precise



What to Know Before You Buy a High Frequency Welded Tube Line

If you're evaluating a high frequency welded tube making machine, you’re probably juggling specs, uptime promises, and real‑world feedback. I’ve toured more than a few mills; the best setups feel calm at speed—no chatter, no mystery downtime, just a smooth coil-to-bundle rhythm. Let’s unpack what matters now, not five brochures ago.

Industry snapshot

Demand is moving toward thinner gauges with higher line speeds, better inline NDT, and faster size changes. In fact, a lot of shops now ask for recipe-driven setups and remote diagnostics. Sustainability is creeping in too—energy-efficient solid-state HF welders and heat recovery on scarfing dust extraction are no longer “nice-to-haves.”

Core process flow (real-life view)

  • Material: low-carbon steel, galvanized, and increasingly 201/304 stainless; coils typically 0.3–3.0 mm.
  • Uncoiling → leveling → edge trimming (when needed) → forming (breakdown/fin-pass) → HF induction welding → internal/external scarfing → sizing/turkshead → cutting → bundling.
  • Testing: eddy current (ASTM E213), occasional hydro (API/ASTM as required), flattening and flaring (ASTM A450), tensile (ASTM A370), dimensional checks (ASTM A513 / EN 10296‑2).
  • Service life: roll tooling ≈8,000–15,000 hours depending on grade; welder impeder sets ≈2–6 months with cooling done right.
  • Typical industries: furniture, HVAC, automotive components, construction, light mechanical tubing.

Representative technical specifications

Tube OD range ≈10–76 mm (other ranges available)
Wall thickness 0.3–3.0 mm (real-world use may vary by grade)
Line speed Up to ≈120 m/min for thin gauges
HF welder power ≈100–400 kW solid-state
Cut length accuracy ±0.5 mm per 3 m (with servo flying saw)
Straightness / ovality ≤1.5 mm/m; ≤0.8% OD (typical targets)
Related line (sheet prep) Cut-to-length: 0.3–3.0 mm, width ≤1500 mm, min length 500 mm; conveyor length customizable

Quick aside: many customers pair a high frequency welded tube making machine with a high-speed cut-to-length line to prep open plates for fixtures or downstream stamping. It’s not mandatory, but it simplifies flow in mixed-product shops.

Vendor landscape (condensed)

Vendor Notable strengths HF range Certs
YingYee Machinery, Shijiazhuang, Hebei (Room B1106, Zhongliang Plaza, No.345 Youyi North St., Xinhua District) Pragmatic customization; competitive pricing; responsive remote support ≈100–400 kW ISO 9001, CE (project-dependent)
Thermatool Advanced HF power supplies; strong process control ≈100–800 kW CE, UL where applicable
T&H Lemont Robust mills; tooling expertise Project-specific ISO 9001
Yoder High-end automation; repeatable changeovers Project-specific CE, ISO (varies)

Customization that actually matters

  • Quick-change cassettes and digital roll position presets.
  • Solid-state HF with automatic impedance matching; real-time weld heat feedback.
  • Inline eddy current + length/oval/straightness SPC dashboard.
  • Dust/fume extraction at scarfers; water cooling loop with conductivity monitoring.

Case notes and test data

A furniture tube plant switched to a high frequency welded tube making machine with 250 kW HF. Line speed rose from 70 to 105 m/min on 0.9 mm low‑carbon steel. Eddy current reject rate dropped from 2.1% to 0.6% after better edge prep and impeder cooling. Typical production QA: tensile per ASTM A370 passed with weld tensile at ≈95–100% of base metal; ovality held at 0.6% OD; burr height ≤0.03 mm post-scarfing.

Related equipment: cut-to-length, high speed

For shops feeding multiple cells, a high-speed cut-to-length line helps—0.3–3.0 mm thickness, up to 1500 mm width, minimum cut 500 mm; longest conveyor customizable. It’s simple, but the uptime math is persuasive.

Compliance and safety

Look for CE marking, ISO 9001 quality systems, and electrical safety in line with IEC 60204‑1. For stainless mechanical tubing, EN 10296‑2 is a good anchor; for carbon steel, ASTM A513/A500 and the relevant NDT standards keep everyone honest.

Final tip

Don’t buy on kW alone. Watch the weld bead and scarfing consistency at speed, verify SPC data, and ask for a week of logged utilities. It sounds basic, but surprisingly, it separates great mills from merely okay ones.

  1. ASTM A513/A513M – Electric-Resistance-Welded Carbon Steel Mechanical Tubing.
  2. EN 10296-2:2017 – Welded circular stainless steel tubes for mechanical/general engineering.
  3. ASTM E213 – Standard Practice for Eddy-Current Examination of Metal Tubular Products.
  4. ASTM A370 – Standard Test Methods for Mechanical Testing of Steel Products.
  5. IEC 60204-1:2016 – Safety of machinery – Electrical equipment of machines.

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