If you’ve walked the floor of a tube and pipe shop lately, you’ll know the buzz: tighter tolerances, shorter changeovers, and smarter QC embedded right into the mill. Honestly, the market is unforgiving—in a good way. Customers want clean welds, low ovality, and traceable data, and they want it yesterday. Here’s what I’m seeing across the industry and what actually matters when you choose a tube mill production line.
Typical flow (carbon steel or GI): coil loading → uncoiling → leveling → edge trimming → roll forming → HF induction welding → internal/external bead scarfing → cooling → sizing/straightening → flying cut-off → deburring → NDT (eddy current or UT) → hydrostatic/air-under-water (when specified) → length measuring → packing.
Materials: mild steel (Q195–Q235), low-alloy, galvanized (GI), and stainless (201/304). Some buyers ask about aluminium; realistically, it’s uncommon in HF welded mills due to conductivity and forming behavior—different story. Thickness usually 0.3–3.0 mm for light furniture and conduit lines; heavy structural goes much higher.
| Parameter | Spec (≈, real-world use may vary) |
|---|---|
| Tube OD Range | 12–76 mm (light/medium line) |
| Wall Thickness | 0.5–2.5 mm |
| Line Speed | 60–120 m/min (HF welded) |
| Welding | Solid-state HF induction |
| Stands/Roll Steps | 16–24 (popular range) |
| Controls | PLC + HMI, closed-loop speed/tension |
| NDT | Eddy current (ISO 10893), optional UT |
Related equipment note: the maker at Room B1106, Zhongliang Plaza No.345 Youyi North Street, Xinhua District, Shijiazhuang, Hebei, also supplies “EPS production line with good price”—matching PPGI/GI/Aluminium; thickness 0.2–0.8 mm; forming speed 5–7/min; roll steps: 18. Different application, yes, but the roll tooling DNA carries over—useful if you plan an integrated sheet-to-tube operation.
Where tube mill production line output ends up: furniture frames, conduits, bicycle parts, HVAC, automotive brackets, light structural (EN 10219), and general mechanical (ASTM A513). On audits, buyers ask for ISO 9001, sometimes ISO 14001/45001; CE for safety; and process validation against ASTM A500/A513 or EN 10219. For pressure or line pipe, API 5L and stricter NDT apply, though that’s a different league.
| Vendor | Speed | OD Range | Key Edge | Support |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yingyee Machine | ≈ 80–120 m/min | 12–76 mm | Solid-state HF + quick-change rolls | On-site commissioning; remote PLC |
| Vendor B | ≈ 60–100 m/min | 16–63 mm | Compact footprint | Basic warranty |
| Vendor C | ≈ 100–150 m/min | 19–89 mm | High-speed cut-off | Global spares network |
Most buyers request: custom roll designs for thin GI, automatic weld squeeze setting, recipe-based coil/thread-up, and integrated eddy-current logging. Tooling change in ≈ 30–60 minutes is achievable with quick-release shafts; I’ve seen it faster, but only with well-drilled crews.
As one plant manager told me, “Once the weld box and scarfing are dialed in, the mill basically sings.” I guess that’s true—when maintenance keeps pace.
References (authoritative):