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Metal Slitting Lines: The Complete 2026 Guide

Everything about metal slitting lines: types, components, automation options & ROI payback. Compare MD-850 to MD-2200 specs in one comprehensive guide.

A metal slitting line is a continuous coil processing system that transforms wide master coils (600–2,200 mm) into narrower strips with precision width tolerances as tight as ±0.1 mm. Every HVAC duct, automotive bracket, and steel stud in construction starts as a slit coil — making slitting lines the backbone of modern metal service centers.

This guide covers everything a production manager, equipment buyer, or plant engineer needs to know: how slitting works, the components inside each line, how to select the right configuration, and what ROI to expect.

¿Qué es una línea de corte longitudinal de metales?

A slitting line is a continuous processing system that cuts a wide coil longitudinally into multiple narrower strips using circular rotary knives. The four-step process:

  1. Uncoils a wide master coil (typically 600–2,200 mm)
  2. Feeds the strip through a set of circular rotary knives
  3. Separates the material into multiple narrower strips
  4. Recoils each strip onto individual take-up reels

The process runs at speeds from 30 m/min (heavy gauge) to over 250 m/min (light gauge), with width tolerances as tight as ±0.1 mm on servo-controlled systems. Width tolerance specifications follow industry standards per ASTM A568 for carbon steel sheet and EN 10051 for European hot-rolled strip.

Key distinctions from other coil processing:

CorteCTL (Cut-to-Length)Blanking
SalidaBobinas/bandas estrechasFlat sheetsShaped blanks
Cutting directionLongitudinalTransverseContour
Typical useTubing, roll formingSheet fabricationStamping
Scrap rate2–5%3–8%5–15%

Not sure which process you need? Read our Slitting vs Blanking vs CTL comparison.

Types of Slitting Lines

By Gauge Range

TypeGama de espesoresVelocidadAplicaciones típicas
Light Gauge0.1–3.0 mm100–250 m/minHVAC, appliances, electronics enclosures
Medium Gauge3.0–8.0 mm50–120 m/minAutomotive components, structural tubing
Heavy Gauge8.0–25.0 mm15–60 m/minShipbuilding, pipe manufacturing, heavy construction

By Automation Level

  • Manual: Operator controls blade positioning, threading, and tension. Suitable for job shops with <500 tons/month.
  • Semi-Automatic: Motorized blade positioning with PLC-based sequencing. Reduces changeover time by 40–60%.
  • Fully Automatic: Servo-driven spacer positioning, automatic threading, closed-loop tension control. For service centers processing 3,000+ tons/month.

Considering an automation upgrade for your existing line? See our Slitting Line PLC Upgrade Guide.

Key Components Explained

Every slitting line shares five core sections. Understanding each helps you specify the right configuration for your production needs.

1. Uncoiler (Decoiler)

The uncoiler holds the master coil and feeds strip into the line under controlled tension.

Key specs to evaluate:

ParámetroLight GaugeMedium GaugeHeavy Gauge
Coil weight capacity5–10 tons10–20 tons20–35 tons
Coil ID range508–610 mm508–610 mm508–762 mm
Expansion typeMechanical wedgeHydraulicHydraulic
Hold-down armPneumaticHydraulicHydraulic

What to look for: Hydraulic expansion for coils >10 tons prevents mandrel slippage. A motorized coil car with V-saddle alignment speeds up coil loading by 3–5 minutes per change.

2. Slitting Head (Slitter)

The heart of the line. Rotary circular knives mounted on arbors shear the strip into target widths.

Critical specifications:

  • Arbor diameter: 150–300 mm (larger = more rigid, less deflection)
  • Blade material: D2 tool steel (standard), carbide-tipped (for stainless/AHSS)
  • Blade clearance: 5–12% of material thickness per side
  • Number of cuts: Up to 20+ simultaneous strips
  • Positioning: Manual spacer (budget) → Servo-driven automatic (high-volume)

Pro tip: Blade clearance is the single biggest factor affecting edge quality. Too tight = premature blade wear; too loose = burr and rollover. Start at 8% of thickness per side and adjust based on edge inspection.

Want detailed blade setup procedures? See our Blade Setup Guide.

3. Tension Stand (Loop Control)

Manages strip tension between the slitting head and the recoiler. This component determines whether your slit coils come out tight and uniform or telescoped and loose.

Two main types:

TypeMechanismLo mejor para
Friction padAdjustable brake pads grip each stripLight gauge, lower cost
Roller tensionDriven rollers with individual tension controlMedium-heavy gauge, higher precision

Why it matters: Uneven tension across strips causes “telescoping” — where one strip winds tighter than its neighbors, creating coils that can’t be processed downstream.

4. Recoiler (Winder)

Takes up the slit strips onto individual mandrels or a common drum.

Configurations:

  • Single mandrel: One strip at a time — for wide, heavy-gauge strips
  • Double mandrel: Two rewinding positions for non-stop production
  • Tensioned drum: All strips wound simultaneously on a common drum with separator discs — most common for light-medium gauge

Key spec: Recoiler torque must match your heaviest gauge × widest strip × target tension. Under-specifying torque leads to loose coils and production stops.

5. Auxiliary Equipment

EquipmentFunciónWhen Needed
Edge trimmerRemoves strip edges for clean-cut productsWhen customer specifies “trimmed edge”
Scrap winderCoils edge trim scrap for recyclingAlways (reduces floor hazards)
Looping pitAbsorbs speed differences between slitter and recoilerHeavy gauge lines >6 mm
Sheet stackerStacks short sheets instead of recoilingCombined slitting + CTL operations

MD Series Specifications Comparison

MaxDo manufactures four slitting line models covering 0.3–25 mm gauge range. Below is a side-by-side comparison:

EspecificaciónMD-850MD-1350MD-1650MD-2200
Strip width range20–850 mm20–1,350 mm20–1,650 mm20–2,200 mm
Gama de espesores0.3–6.0 mm0.5–8.0 mm1.0–12.0 mm2.0–25.0 mm
Line speedHasta 250 m/minUp to 200 m/minHasta 120 m/minHasta 60 m/min
Coil weight10 tons15 tons20 toneladas30 toneladas
Tolerancia de anchura±0,1 mm±0,1 mm±0.15 mm±0.2 mm
Max simultaneous cuts2016128
Blade positioningServo autoServo autoMotorizedMotorized
Best forHVAC, electronics, appliancesGeneral service centerStructural, automotiveShipbuilding, heavy plate

Need detailed specs on the MD-850? Read our Inside the MD-850 deep dive.

How to Choose the Right Slitting Line

Selecting a slitting line comes down to four factors. Get these right, and the rest follows.

Factor 1: Material & Gauge Range

Match the line to your primary material mix:

MaterialRecommended Feature
Mild steel (0.5–3 mm)Standard D2 blades, friction tension
Stainless steelCarbide blades, film-protected pass-through, extra-rigid arbors
AluminumRubber-lined rollers (prevent surface marking), wider blade clearance
High-strength (AHSS/UHSS)Heavy-duty arbors, hydraulic tension, reinforced frame
Pre-painted/coatedFelt-lined guides, non-marking recoiler pads

Factor 2: Production Volume

Monthly VolumeRecommended LevelPor qué
<500 tonsManual or semi-autoLower capital cost, sufficient for job-shop flexibility
500–3,000 tonsSemi-auto with servo blade positioningFaster changeover pays for itself in 8–12 months
>3,000 tonsTotalmente automáticoMinimize changeover time, maximize throughput

Factor 3: Width Tolerance Requirements

  • Standard (±0.5 mm): Sufficient for construction, general fabrication
  • Precision (±0.2 mm): Required for roll forming, tube/pipe manufacturing
  • High Precision (±0.1 mm): Needed for electronics, precision stamping, automotive

Factor 4: Floor Space & Layout

A typical slitting line requires:

  • Light gauge (MD-850): 15 m × 6 m (90 m²)
  • Medium gauge (MD-1350): 20 m × 8 m (160 m²)
  • Heavy gauge (MD-2200): 30 m × 10 m (300 m²)

Add 30–50% for coil storage, crane access, and forklift paths.

ROI & Cost Analysis

Capital Investment Range

Tipo de líneaPrice Range (FOB)InstalaciónTotal Landed Cost
Light gauge (manual)$120,000–$250,000$15,000–$30,000$150,000–$300,000
Medium gauge (semi-auto)$250,000–$500,000$30,000–$60,000$300,000–$600,000
Heavy gauge (full auto)$500,000–$1,200,000$60,000–$150,000$600,000–$1,500,000

Payback Calculation Example

Scenario: A metal service center slits 1,500 tons/month of mild steel (currently outsourcing).

ItemValue
Current outsourcing cost$45/ton
In-house slitting cost (w/ new line)$18/ton
Net saving per ton$27/ton
Monthly saving$40,500
Annual saving$486,000
Investment (MD-1350, semi-auto, installed)$420,000
Payback period10.4 months

Additional benefits not captured above:

  • Faster delivery to customers (2 days vs. 2 weeks from outsourcing)
  • Quality control (in-house inspection, no transit damage)
  • Inventory flexibility (slit on demand vs. batch ordering)

Want to run your own numbers? Try our Slitting Line ROI Calculator.

Common Quality Issues & Prevention

DefectCauseSolución
Edge burrBlade clearance too wide, worn bladesReduce clearance to 5–8% of thickness; replace blades
Camber (strip curves laterally)Uneven blade clearance left vs. rightEqualize clearance on both sides of each cut
Crossbow (strip arcs lengthwise)Excessive tension on outer stripsAdjust tension stand; use looping pit
Coil telescopingUneven recoiler tensionCalibrate individual tension on each strip channel
Surface scratchesDebris on guides or rollersInstall wiper pads; clean rollers every shift
Width variationArbor deflection, blade wearUse larger arbor diameter; monitor blade condition

Detailed troubleshooting procedures: Slitting Line Troubleshooting Guide.

Maintenance Best Practices

Daily Checklist

  • [ ] Inspect blade edges for chips or wear
  • [ ] Check hydraulic oil level and pressure
  • [ ] Verify tension stand calibration
  • [ ] Clean guide rollers and strip path
  • [ ] Inspect scrap winder operation

Semanal

  • [ ] Lubricate all bearing points per manufacturer schedule
  • [ ] Check arbor runout (max 0.02 mm TIR)
  • [ ] Inspect recoiler mandrel for scoring
  • [ ] Review PLC error logs

Mensualmente

  • [ ] Full blade measurement and rotation/replacement
  • [ ] Hydraulic filter replacement
  • [ ] Alignment check: uncoiler → slitter → recoiler centerline
  • [ ] Electrical connection torque check

Download our complete Maintenance Schedule Template.

Preguntas frecuentes

What is the difference between slitting and cutting?

Slitting uses circular rotary knives to cut a coil longitudinalmente (along its length) into narrower strips. “Cutting” usually refers to transverse cutting (cross-cutting) where a coil is cut into flat sheets at specific lengths. Slitting produces coiled strips; cutting produces flat sheets.

How thick can a slitting line process?

Light-gauge lines handle 0.1–3 mm. Heavy-gauge lines process up to 25 mm. The thickness determines line speed, blade type, and structural requirements. Most service centers operate in the 0.5–6 mm range.

What is slitting line speed?

Line speed depends on gauge and material. Light-gauge stainless steel might run at 150 m/min, while heavy-gauge carbon steel runs at 20–40 m/min. Speed is limited by the ability to maintain edge quality and proper tension — running too fast on thick material causes burr and blade damage.

How to reduce scrap in slitting?

Three approaches yield the biggest improvements: (1) optimize trim width to minimize edge loss — even 2 mm less trim per side saves 0.3–0.5% yield on narrow strips; (2) use precision blade positioning to hit target widths on the first pass; (3) maintain blade sharpness — dull blades cause wider kerf and more material loss.

Can a slitting line process aluminum without surface damage?

Yes, with proper precautions: use rubber-coated or felt-lined guide rollers, apply protective film before slitting, widen blade clearance to 12–15% of thickness (aluminum tears rather than shears), and use non-marking tension pads on the recoiler.

Get a Quote for Your Slitting Line

MaxDo’s MD Series covers the full 0.3–25 mm gauge range with 25+ patented innovations in blade-change and uncoiling technology. Whether you’re starting a new service center or upgrading existing equipment:

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