A Practical Guide for Engineers Designing for Sheet Metal
Designing sheet metal components requires an understanding of how flat material behaves when it is cut, bent, and formed. Designs that follow established sheet metal guidelines are faster to quote, easier to manufacture, and more reliable in production.
This guide outlines practical design principles that help engineering teams create manufacturable sheet metal parts.
Sheet metal fabrication transforms flat metal sheets into finished components using processes such as:
Because material is formed rather than machined, geometry must account for:
If designs don’t take into account the right type of processes for their parts and consider geometry early in the process, you could experience quote delays, unexpected cost increases, manufacturing defects, and redesign cycles.
But following these guidelines can help your designs achieve the precision and timelines you need for your sheet metal projects.
Sheet metal parts are typically produced from uniform thickness stock. Choosing the right materials and thicknesses affects elements like:
| Material | Characteristics |
|---|---|
| Mild Steel | Strong, cost-effective, easy to form |
| Stainless Steel | Corrosion resistant, higher springback |
| Aluminum | Lightweight, good corrosion resistance |
| Copper / Brass | Conductive, decorative applications |
Designing with standard radii improves tool compatibility and repeatability and can help you avoid challenges that come from too small a bend radius can cause, such as:
A safe guideline is to use an inside bend radius equal to or greater than the material thickness, though this varies by material.
Bending metal stretches the outer surface of the bend. If the bend radius is too small, the material may crack.
| Material | Recommended Minimum Inside Bend Radius |
|---|---|
| Mild Steel | 1 × material thickness |
| Stainless Steel | 1–1.5 × material thickness |
| Aluminum | 1–2 × material thickness |
| High-strength steel | 2–3 × material thickness |
Flanges must be long enough for press brake tooling to form them properly.
Minimum flange length: 4 × material thickness
Example:
| Material Thickness | Minimum Flange Length |
|---|---|
| 1 mm | 4 mm |
| 2 mm | 8 mm |
| 3 mm | 12 mm |
*Note that flanges shorter than this may require special tooling or redesign.
Holes located too close to edges can deform during cutting or bending. Maintaining adequate edge distance prevents:
Hole-to-edge distance: ≥ 2 × material thickness
Example:
| Thickness | Minimum Edge Distance |
|---|---|
| 1 mm | 2 mm |
| 2 mm | 4 mm |
| 3 mm | 6 mm |
Holes too close to bends may distort during forming.
Minimum hole-to-bend distance: 2 × material thickness + bend radius
Example:
If thickness = 2 mm and bend radius = 2 mm
Minimum spacing = 6 mm
This spacing ensures holes remain round and dimensionally accurate after forming.
Slots are commonly used for adjustment, assembly, or weight reduction. Very narrow slots may require secondary machining rather than laser cutting.
| Feature | Guideline |
|---|---|
| Minimum slot width | ≥ material thickness |
| Slot length | ≥ 2 × width |
| Slot-to-edge distance | ≥ material thickness |
When bends intersect with edges or other bends, the material can tear during forming. Relief cuts prevent this problem. Reliefs are especially important for:
Without relief cuts, corners may:
| Feature | Recommended Size |
|---|---|
| Relief width | ≥ material thickness |
| Relief depth | ≥ bend radius |
Sheet metal parts are manufactured from flat patterns that are later bent into shape. Designers should account for material stretching during bending or incorrect flat patterns can cause dimension errors in formed parts.
The K-Factor represents the location of the neutral axis within the material during bending. It helps determine how much material stretches during a bend. Most CAD sheet metal tools use K-Factor to automatically calculate flat patterns.
Working with realistic K-Factor values improves bend accuracy and repeatability.
| Material | Typical K-Factor |
|---|---|
| Mild steel | 0.30–0.40 |
| Stainless steel | 0.35–0.45 |
| Aluminium | 0.40–0.50 |
Understanding springback helps ensure accurate final bend angles. Springback occurs after bending, when sheet metal tends to partially return toward its original shape. This effect depends on things like:
Materials like stainless steel and aluminum exhibit more springback than mild steel.
Design engineers frequently encounter manufacturing issues caused by small design decisions. Some of the common sheet metal design mistakes include
Results in distorted holes and slots.
Short flanges cannot be formed without specialized tooling.
Sheet metal fabrication is not machining. Overly tight tolerances increase cost and delay production.
Radio Sharp bends in CAD models do not reflect real fabrication conditions.
Multiple bends, small features, or compound angles increase:
Use this checklist before sending a part for a quote for a reliable estimate.
Early collaboration helps prevent manufacturability issues. Budde Sheet Metal Works supports engineers with:
If you’re unsure whether a design will be manufactured efficiently, our team can review your CAD model before quoting.