How To Bend Sheet Metal Without A Sheet Metal Brake
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- Опубліковано 9 лип 2024
- #artfullyrogue #makingalivingasamaker #metalartist
If you do metal work, at some point you will need to bend sheet metal. And if you're not ready to invest in a sheet metal brake yet, then I'll show you how to bend sheet metal without a sheet metal brake.
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I was just told that it is impossible to bend 16 guage stainless steel without a giant industrial box brake bender from a machine shop with giant brakes. Your doing dark arts and black magic!
Update: Using this method I was able to bend a 16 guage stainless steel 3" deep pan. I folded the tabs in just like a box. The dimensions were 48" x 30". Used sheet metal vicegrips and 2 copper pipes to assist bending. Welded with cheap Harbor freight Welder. Sanded with 80 grit to 3000 grit for mirror finish. Then clear coated.
Thank you so much! I am trying to make a new burner pan for my fire feature after cutting out the old rusted pan-your video (plus industrial metal supply) was just what I needed!
These are great tips for those of us that infrequently bend 20ga sheet metal. Thanks.
Exactly what I was looking for. Thanks, much appreciated 👍
Thanks so much Doug. Very interesting and informative video this week. Can't wait to see more videos soon. Keep up the great craftsmanship and hard work my friend. Weld on. Fab on. Keep making. God bless.
Thank you for the video! It’s much appreciated.
Great video! Thank you very much!!!!
Great tutorial this method is very useful or the only option for many types of bends without needing special machines and dies
I think this is a great video. I have watched many old school tradesman fix or fab up things with these old time must know "tricks of the trade". These simple, but not always easy tasks separate the men from the boys. Thanks for sharing, as this type of knowledge benefits young men out there trying to become skilled tradesmen.
I did some tool boxes a way back and use that same approach , to be the first tool boxes I made it was a great satisfaction, is good to se a pro reinforcing what I was thinking was bad
Good advice/ tip, professor Doug. Hope the bus conversion is going well.
Fabulous video! I was just told by my makerspace that they could not help me build molds for my fused glass designs. I am definitely going to try this technique. Thank you so much.
You're very welcome. I hope it works out for you.
Very helpful
Thank you for taking the time to make this video it help me a lot.
Excellent! I'm glad it came in handy
I did buy a vise attachment for bending. Haven’t tried it yet but looking forward to
Good deal, curious how it goes.
Thanks! Got a stainless window box for an art patron of mine to do that has to be right. Too small and finicky for big press so this will be handy.
Great tips
Great Video Doug, that's how I Learn to been steel . In the Good old Days ,in Shop Class in High school 🏫 !!!!
Right! back when you didn't have access to all the tools you did what you had to do
Very cool. I have a project ATV that needs floorboards.
2pieces of metal, each with 2bends. I'm going to have to try this because I can't afford a machine for 4 short bends. Thanks for posting this 👍👍
Sounds like a cool project and I'm sure this process will work for what you're doing
Thanks mate, that's excellent. I've got that stuff around so I can start work building my forge. I've been looking at my sheet of 8' x 4' x 1/8" with some trepidation, but the angle grinder should subdue the monster with care. Good 'ealth, John Warner, Australia
Any recommendations for getting a clean bend when you need it so far from the end of the material that you can't use those vise grips and C-clamps only go so far from the sides? I've been using a four pound hammer and forming the sheet to the edge of my workbench (1/2" steel tabletop). Also using 16 gauge and I think it's probably better to cut and weld for this size job. Except you should see my welds...
It's the ubiquitous flexible fabric bandaid that makes this real. Anyone, doing anything in their shop who isn't wearing one is a pretender. Thanks a lot for this. I have an old, inheritied, steel table Craftsman table saw that I use for bending the once a decade times I need to bend sheet metal. If I want a sharper radius I use a 2x4 and a 4 pound sledge and then the sledge by itself. Obviously I never bend for pretty. Thanks again.
straight to the point. thank you.
my pleasure
Good stuff dude
Excellent video. I'll use these tips as I am an amateur at DIY Vehicle Sheet metal repair.
Cool thanks for watching
Fantastic video. Perfect tutorial. Thank you.
@@Nothing_to_see_here thank you very much
Exactly what I was looking for a easy way to bend stainless steel at home with out a brake, gonna make a camper trailer kitchen from my old stainless steel bbq
Very cool
Thank you
Very nice and clear explanation. You’re real cool. Thank you!
Greatly appreciated
@@ArtfullyRogue tell me the tools name that you use i need this tools for bending steel.... i live in Pakistan!
Great instructions. Thanks!
Glad it was helpful!
Great video! Thanks! I have to replace some sections of 16 gauge sheet metal on an old 1948 Missouri Pacific caboose roof. Likely around 60 feet altogether, and I am thinking in 8 foot long (max) sections since that is what I am seeing available. Can this technique be used for pieces as long as 8 feet? It's for the edges of the caboose, so the pieces will be rounded over instead of a tight bend.
Thanks so much sir am from Nigeria (Eastern Part) and am a HSE officer, i never know of this.
excellent, great information Thanks , now I'm off to bend to a deflector plate,
Perfect! Thanks for watching!
Will heating the area to be bent red hot and then bending it affect the strength of the steel?
Great video thank you. :)
Glad you liked it!
Great job Doug, very helpful.
Thank you very much
@@ArtfullyRogue Off to make the damper (cookiesheet) cover.
Thanks Doug. No link to the VG bender tool. I am going to attempt to bend 0.125 aluminum diamond tread using this method. I like the radius bend, so to not crack the metal... if I can figure out how to allow for the radius. I have bent this metal before by clamping, like you did, but used a hammer and arm strength, but of course, hammer leaves dents.
SHARP Presentation. TY
You're very welcome
You can also hammer the bend to be flatter/less round
4:00 You're lucky your finger has a bandaid because at least you still have the finger
I love your idea
Thank you very much
Thank you! I need to bend and fab a small piece to fix my rusty shock tower
Glad it was helpful
Good fab tip Doug, btw 16ga steel will bend easier then 16ga stainless
So helpful! Thanks for sharing. I want to make a small container to fit a tight space. How do you close the gap after bending all four sides? I can’t tell. Was it welded together?
Glad it was helpful. Once closed, I weld it.
Good tips thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching!
Awesome tip
Glad it was helpful!
Is it possible to make an open hem fold on a 16 gauge stainless steel piece that is 1.5 inch width using this method??? I was think if I clamped down a much thinner piece and I bent it up instead of down then it would work - but that’s just me thinking and I have zero experience. I’m desperate for a solution and can’t find a tool to do this that’s under $200.
I'm trying too make a small sheet metal fuse relay box for under the hood around 9x5x2" I didn't know how expensive thay are even the cheapest plastic ones. Thanks for the video .
Glad it helped
Smart dude...👌
necessity is the mother of all invention
When i want a crisp more squared off corner i will do the same thing with the c clamps and then used a rubber mallet to bend it against the edge of the bench
I definitely use a rubber mallet when I'm bending longer pieces.
ur a g, thanks
Awesome, thank you Doug! Have you ever tried bending 11 GA (0.116") carbon steel or thicker with the vice clamps? Did it require scoring with the angle grinder? Thank you!
definitely required scoring on anything 11g or thicker
HFT doesn't seem to sell this central machinery sheet metal brake anymore.
Bend it the best that you can using the edge of the bench. Then get in there with a block of wood and a hammer still clamped to the bench. And if you use a little art and finesse, it will look as good or better than the bend from the giant hydraulic brake. Not as fast, but also not 10,000 bucks.
Should that be welded where it was scored? Seems like it would be a weak spot.
If it's a seam that will be seen or is a support then yes, I weld it. When I make trays for my water fountains, they typically get powder coated and don't hold any weight so for those, I don't usually weld.
Thank you for this great video and providing an alternative. Wouldn't the cut in the metal weaken the strength of the metal. I need to do a Z cut with only 2 inches in between for the channeled floor pan on my hot rod . Do you usually add a bead of welding to increase rigidity?
Great point! It all depends on the project for me. Sometimes I will had a bead along the corner to strengthen. If I'm making a simple tray of a project with less concern for strength and its more for looks, then I don't add the bead.
@@ArtfullyRogue Thank you! Makes perfect sense
What if you put the cut/ score on the inside of the bend? And before you bend it - you give the cut a quick hit with some spray paint to seal it off from rusting?
If you use a wider cut off of wheel bending into the cut is a little better. For this I was using a very thin cut off and bending into the cut causes the two edges to hit and prevents a full 90 degree bend.
Do you have any tips for bending stainless steel beyond 90 degrees to like 60 or 45?
I've done that using this method. Moving the top plate furtther back from the line after you've bent the 90, you can keep pushing it beyond the 90 degrees
@@ArtfullyRogue Thanks for the quick reply
Why not perforate with elongated holes along the bent line instead ? It will not lead to fracture as fast as cutting along the ende as you did.
Overall a good video though.
I think drilling holes would consume more time and definitely need to be welded afterwards. If I'm understanding your suggestion correctly. Thanks for watching, its greatly appreciated.
@@ArtfullyRogue Depends on the result you want. If you laser cut or water jet cut it´s not a big deal. There are patented perforations especially for that.
If you want to bend really thick material which you can´t otherwise it can make sense as well.
If you don´t want to weaken the bend which leads to a fatigue fracture as well, scoring the metal will lead to a fatigue fracture for sure and you need to weld that as well, welding holes shut can be easier and faster, again depending on the result you need.
It´s usually used for small batch manufacturing or prototyping with precise and easy bends.
subscribed
greatly appreciated!
how do you make a box like this? ua-cam.com/video/VRUF0XmeSAs/v-deo.html
It is rectangle tubing.
Wear ppe with that angle grinder.
Bad habits die hard
❤️ P"R"O"M"O"S"M!!
Great video! Thank you!
Thank you very much
Thank you
You're very welcome