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Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
I am looking for a sheet metal manual brake press for work. I have very little sheet metal experience and I am hoping some of you guys who have experience with these machines can point me in the right direction. This is mostly for low quantity items, we might use it on the robot as well, but not extensively.
Here are the requirements: Bend Width: 48 inch Max Materials: 0.030 – 0.125 Aluminum & 0.020 – 0.060 Stainless Steel We only plan on doing 90 degree bends on it. All suggestions are appreciated. |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
.060 steel is heavy, but do-able...the .125 aluminum is extremely heavy and would require some pretty heavy duty equipment. If the thicker aluminum could be fabricated by some other means, you have many more options for something that would work.
In any event, new equipment that is good is extremely expensive...but good, used stuff is often available on Craigslist and Ebay. For bending materials that long and heavy avoid the Harbor Freight / Northern Tool stuff - it will break and/or hurt someone. |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
Do you have any suggestions in particular?
Even if it was only up to .090 aluminum, might still work. As for the budget, I need to get an idea of how much it would be to get something that suits our needs. We have a Promecam RG 103 that we use for heavy duty things, but all our punches and dies are for bending 3/4" thick steel material. Buying sheetmetal dies for this machine can get pricy, not to mention the inconvenience of having to change dies for a low quantity item. Once, I know what manual brake presses are out there for our purposes, we will decide if we get it or just get dies for our machine. |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
We bought one at an auction online that was only 24" wide, and can do up to 0.090. We learned while researching press brakes that it is very hard to find manual press brakes anymore. Good luck, and I would like to hear what you learn.
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Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
Just had a quick look at a place I buy from but it won't do what you want but have a look at the site as it might give you some ideas.
http://www.busybeetools.com/products...N.-3-IN-1.html |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
We were in this same position a couple of months ago. We wanted to have the ability to bend .090 aluminum and this was the best machine that we could find: http://www.grizzly.com/products/G0542
This is a beast of a machine and it bends .090. I don't know about .125 though. |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
I'm getting a used one from where i work for our team. They bought a new one
and we got the old one. I worked as a blacksmith for a few years (and did sheet metal work for 2 1/2 years before that) and one thing i learned when working with aluminum to keep in mind is that while thin aluminum sheet metal is easy to bend...the thicker stuff is a bit tricky to work with. If you work with anything over 1/8 inch you might need to heat right at the area your bending or else the aluminum can crack when bent. We've bent aluminum up to 1/4 inch after heating with little problem. Its a bit hard to heat it and not melt it. One of the old blacksmiths showed me how you keep heating it and checking it with a piece of wood. you keep rubbing the wood on it (with the heat source removed) and when you see a brown streak or smear its getting close to its melting point. Also remember to wear gloves when heating. And to keep your fingers clear of pince points in the brake. If you have the money to buy a new one...thats great, but if you can't keep your eye on auction sales or sheet metal shops that are either going out of business or upgrading equipment. Heating and air conditioning companies often also do their own sheet metal work. You don't need a 8' or 6' brake press...something 3' to 4' will do for robotics. Also if you can get one that has ajustable fingers instead on one solid top brake so its easier to make smaller parts. Here are the two basic types... http://metal.baileighindustrial.com/...and-pan-brakes The first one has adjustable fingers. The fourth one down has one solid brake. |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
Basically there are 2 kinds of bending machines, a "Box Pan Brake" (or just "brake") and a "Press Brake".
The box pan brake basically clamps the material and you lift an arm to bend the material. Bending 0.060 SS or .125 Al will require a fairly beefy machine, a few thousand dollars maybe. The press brake (the one linked is quite small though) uses a high-capacity press to mush 2 pieces of angle iron together, the material to be bent is between them and gets bent in the process. These are not much more than the cost of the press, several hundred dollars for a 25-Ton press for example (not highest quality though...) The advantage of a box pan brake is that you can bend any angle from 1 to 120 degrees. You also have 'fingers' to clamp the material selectively, allowing you to bend a box or pan. The disadvantage is higher cost, and lower capacity. The advantage of a press brake is simplicity, low cost and high capacity. The disadvantage is you can only make 90-degree bends (although you can make a fixture for other specific angles). |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
We have a Pesto box and pan brake that will do about 24" wide. I estimate the machine weighs about 500 lbs. We can do .125 aluminum on it, but not more than a few inches wide. For a wide piece of .125 aluminum, you would need a rather large press brake.
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Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
To make a 48" long bend in mild steel you need to generate at least 14-17 tons. That's a lot for a manual press brake. Take a look at a used 4' Di-Acro press brake. I see alot of them at auctions. Note they usually run 240V
Here is a youtube of what I'm thinking would be good for your use: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3NjSco-Xgs For bending just 90" bends you can use a v die but if there are return flanges you'll need to use a goose neck die. For the robots you build stick with 5052 H32 aluminum. Don't use 6061 T0-T6. Another good little press brake is the Mitsubishi Electric BAll screw press brake. They are expensive but easy to setup and have a small foot print. http://promo.mitsubishi-world.com/pr...f/electric.pdf |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
Thank you all for the replies and the feedback.
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As I mentioned before, we do have a Promecam RG 103, which is a 100 ton press. However, all we do on it is bend 3/4" thick steel and all very high quantities when we run it. I got a quote to get some Gooseneck Punch dies and a Staged Block die, however these dies are over $3k. Not to mention we would have to change dies on the machine every time we want to do something for R&D. I am trying to weight our options and determine what is best. If we got the dies we would be able to make bends up to 100 inches wide which is a plus. Does any one have experience with the brakes from Baileigh? I am looking at: http://metal.baileighindustrial.com/...brake-bb-4816e and: http://metal.baileighindustrial.com/...-brake-bb-4816 But, even the heavy duty one can only do up to 50 thousands. Unless I am not looking at the specs correctly. Any other suggestions? |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
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Their bigger machine, which can do 12 ga (0.105) steel at 96" length is, unfortunately, almost $7k. This will happily bend 1/8" aluminum 8' long... My very best advice is to call Baileigh and have a conversation with them. Quote:
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Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
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Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
We have an old Pexto shear and use it a ton and its very high quality, looks like the brand is now owned by these guys:
http://www.roperwhitney.com/ Who seem to have many professional grade sheet metal tools |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
Dave,
Here is a tonnage chart I found. It is per linear foot so X4 for a 48 inch piece. http://www.powerbrakedies.com/ton.html The tonnage required depends on the radius you will be using to bend your metal and the angle you want to bend it to. There are different kinds of bending coining or air bending. Alum material really requires a 88 deg die to bend it 90 deg because the material will spring back. You could bend .090 AL using a 1/32" minimum bend radius. Here's a video we made to show the kids how a press brake worked when we made a drive base. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1GkvsruJ8g |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
Hi All
Sorry I am late, as i read Dave's request, I would recommend a box & pan brake, something like this; http://www.use-enco.com/CGI/INPDFF?P...MITEM=130-5234 i have purchased both of these machines and have found them to be of very good value as for gage thickness the 10 gage brake is best, but I have worked 5/32 with the bench top, a lot has to do with settings, one of the best "how To's" is http://www.americanmachinetools.com/...hand_brake.htm Have Fun! Geo. |
Re: Sheet Metal Manual Brake Press
Thank you all for the suggestions.
I have a bit busy and haven't move forward with this yet. However, judging from the initial cost and specs of Baileigh I was leading towards the new dies for our existing RG 103. But, now that Andrew and George gave me two more vendors I will see if I will contact them for a quote. Roy, thank you for the chart. Made it easy to learn and explain to my boss what we need. George, that second link has lots of useful information. I have bookmarked it and suggest anyone looking to learn about sheet metal looks into it. Thank you! |
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