Cold-formed steel

Cold-formed steel (CFS) is the common term for steel products shaped by cold-working processes carried out near room temperature, such as rolling, pressing, stamping, bending, etc. Stock bars and sheets of cold-rolled steel (CRS) are commonly used in all areas of manufacturing. The terms are opposed to hot-formed steel and hot-rolled steel.

Cold-formed steel, especially in the form of thin gauge sheets, is commonly used in the construction industry for structural or non-structural items such as columns, beams, joists, studs, floor decking, built-up sections and other components. Such uses have become more and more popular in the US since their standardization in 1946.

Cold-formed steel building

Cold-formed steel members have been used also in bridges, storage racks, grain bins, car bodies, railway coaches, highway products, transmission towers, transmission poles, drainage facilities, firearms, various types of equipment and others.[1][2] These types of sections are cold-formed from steel sheet, strip, plate, or flat bar in roll forming machines, by press brake (machine press) or bending operations. The material thicknesses for such thin-walled steel members usually range from 0.0147 in. (0.373 mm) to about ¼ in. (6.35 mm). Steel plates and bars as thick as 1 in. (25.4 mm) can also be cold-formed successfully into structural shapes (AISI, 2007b).[3]

  1. ^ Wei-Wen Yu, John Wiley and Sons Inc. (2000). Cold-Formed Steel Design. John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY.
  2. ^ "Custom Cold Rolled & Cold Drawn Metal Profiles | Rathbone Precision Metals". www.rathboneprofiles.com. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  3. ^ American Iron and Steel Institute, Commentary on North American Specification for the Design of Cold-Formed Steel Structural Members, Washington, D.C. Published 2007

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