Brake (sheet metal bending)

A brake is a metalworking machine that allows the bending of sheet metal. A cornice brake only allows for simple bends and creases, while a box-and-pan brake also allows one to form box and pan shapes. It is also known as a bending machine or bending brake or in Britain as a sheet metal folder or just a folder.

Manually driven bending brake
Cornice brake
Hydraulic press - 400T

Description

The brake consists of a flat surface onto which the material is placed, and a clamping bar which will come down and hold the material firmly during the bend. This clamping action may be manual, automatic or operated using a foot pedal. The front, gate-like, plate of the machine is hinged and may be lifted, forcing the material extended over a straight edge to bend to follow the plate.

The bends can be to any angle up to a practical limit of about 120 degrees, somewhat more in the case of a bar folder. If the area to be bent is narrow enough, a sharper bend (e.g., for a hem) can be made by inserting the bend under the clamping bar and lowering it.

Box-and-pan brake

In a box-and-pan brake (also known as a finger brake[1]), the clamping bar includes several removable blocks, which may be removed and rearranged to permit bending of restricted areas of a piece of sheet metal or of already partially formed pieces.

After bending, the box or pan form is then completed by screw, solder, weld, rivet, or other metal fixing process.

Bar folder

This is a simplified brake, usually much smaller than cornice or box-and-pan brakes. Typically, a single handle both clamps the workpiece and makes the bend, in a single motion, but the depth is usually much less than what a cornice or box-and-pan brake can handle.

Press brake

This is a more complex tool that forms predetermined bends by clamping the workpiece between a matching punch and die.

Sizes

Brakes come in sizes suitable for light aluminum or brass for small boxes and operated by hand, up to industrial sized and counterweighted hand-operated or hydraulic machines suitable for large sheets of steel.

gollark: I think for a basic standard interface you could get away with something like `thing.run(function)` and it could return a handle which lets you stop it and stuff.
gollark: Yes, but then everyone ends up needing to ship one and it's annoying.
gollark: Hey, we could make some sort of limited standard interface for these things.
gollark: Want to run two things at once? Sure! Want background tasks? Hahahahahano.
gollark: `parallel` isn't great. Priority is... unnecessary... but one thing it lacks is a function to run new processes in an existing parallel loop.

References

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