When people ask me what’s changed lately in Roll Forming Systems, I usually point them to a very specific niche: threading on pipes and bars. The “Threading roll forming machine in details” from YingYee (origin: Room B1106, Zhongliang Plaza, No.345 Youyi North Street, Xinhua District, Shijiazhuang, Hebei) is a tidy example of how a focused machine can outpace generalists. Three-axis for hollow pipes; two-axis for solid bars—simple split, clever execution.
Demand is drifting toward formed (not cut) threads for better grain flow and fatigue strength. Energy, scaffolding, solar racking, and transport hardware are all nudging suppliers to chase cycle time and repeatability. And honestly, buyers want less oil, fewer chips, and fewer headaches—formed threads deliver that.
| Parameter | Threading roll forming machine in details |
|---|---|
| Axes / Application | 3-axis for hollow steel pipes; 2-axis for solid steel bars |
| Diameter range | ≈ Φ8–Φ114 mm (real-world use may vary with material) |
| Thread profiles | Metric (DIN 13), UNC/UNF, trapezoidal; BSPT/NPT on suitable pipe wall |
| Line speed | ≈ 12–25 m/min depending on pitch and OD |
| Main motor | 15–22 kW (inverter-controlled) |
| Die material | SKD11/D2, HRC 58–62 |
| Thread accuracy | Lead error ≤ ±0.05 mm/25 mm; surface finish ≈ Ra 1.6–3.2 μm |
| Controls | PLC (Siemens or equivalent), HMI, pitch presets |
| Certifications | ISO 9001; CE (Machinery Directive) |
No chips, faster cycle times, and stronger threads. Many customers say they also notice steadier dimensions after warmup—less fiddling with offsets. Energy savings tend to follow because material removal is minimal.
| Vendor | Core strengths | Controls | Lead time | Warranty | Price band |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| YingYee | 3-axis pipe focus; robust dies; good value | Siemens PLC/HMI | ≈ 6–10 weeks | 12 months | $$ |
| Vendor A | High automation, remote diagnostics | Beckhoff | 10–16 weeks | 24 months | $$$ |
| Vendor B | Heavy-duty frames; custom pitches | Mitsubishi | 8–12 weeks | 12 months | $$ |
Pitch modules, quick-change die holders, in-line chamfering, auto-lube, and barcode part tracking. If you’re mixing stainless and carbon, ask for separate coolant circuits—sounds fussy, but it cuts contamination headaches.
Common references: ISO 9001 for QMS, CE per Machinery Directive 2006/42/EC, DIN 13 for metric thread tolerances, ISO 898-1 for fastener property checks, ASTM A513 for tubes. Not glamorous, but auditors love tidy paperwork—get those 3.1 certs (EN 10204) on incoming steel.
Bottom line? For threading where speed and strength matter, a dedicated Roll Forming Systems approach—especially 3-axis for pipes and 2-axis for bars—tends to pay back faster than folks expect.