Metallurgists use words that have precise meanings in our daily discussions, and we forget that many people we work with don’t have exposure to the terminology that we are accustomed to using. What follows is a brief tour of the words and phrases you are likely to hear when speaking with your metallurgical representative.| AHSS Guidelines
The Resistance Spot Welding (RSW) process is often used as a model to explain the fundamental concepts behind most resistance welding processes. If the sheets are steel, the resistance to the flow of current of the sheets will be much higher than the copper electrodes, so the steel will get hot while the electrodes remain relatively cool.| AHSS Guidelines
Resistance welding processes represent a family of industrial welding processes that produce the heat required for welding through what is known as joule (J = I Rt) heating.| AHSS Guidelines
Roll Forming takes a flat sheet or strip and feeds it longitudinally through a mill containing several successive paired roller dies, each of which incrementally bend the strip into the desired final shape. The incremental approach can minimize strain localization and compensate for springback.| AHSS Guidelines
There is an increased need to join magnesium alloys to high-strength steels using resistance spot selding to create multi-material lightweight body structures for fuel-efficient vehicles.| AHSS Guidelines
Urbanization and waning interest in vehicle ownership point to new transport opportunities in megacities around the world. Mobility as a Service (MaaS) – characterized by autonomous, ride-sharing-friendly EVs – can be the comfortable, economical, sustainable transport solution of choice thanks to the benefits that today’s steel offers. The WorldAutoSteel organization is working on the Steel […]| AHSS Guidelines
Roll forming is no longer limited to producing simple circular, oval, or rectangular profiles. Advanced cross sections highlight some profile designs that aid in body structure stiffness and packaging space reductions.| AHSS Guidelines