It’s strong. It holds paint well. It offers dimensional variety to structures.
Its visual likeability is enhanced when the tubing is curved into a gentle, supple arch.
Forming that arch, though, is not easy. Unlike bending wide flange beams or S beams, rectangular tube bending and rolling carries a large set of challenges incumbent to its nature.
Chief is that rectangular metal tubing caves in. It’s a hollow section, after all. The correct equipment, directed by skilled tube bender hands, are necessary for rectangular tubing to hold its original dimensions, while staying flat or square.
Accurate radius? Oh yeah, there’s that, too.
Max Weiss Company bends HSS tubing, 2” to 20”, all to exact specifications, and without caving or distortion. Whether your Westmoreland building requires a 6” x 4” x .375 wall, your product will be ready for use.
Larger sizes? OK. How about 20” x 4” x .375 wall. Regardless of size, you can always expect accuracy from Max Weiss Company.
Our rectangular tube bending and rolling experience applies to carbon steel, stainless steel and aluminum tubing in Milwaukee, WI but we have our work all over the country and places like Westmoreland.
How? Max Weiss Company uses a proprietary mandrel bender system to hold the tube’s integrity. It’s a piece of equipment you won’t find anywhere else. Less scrap adds up to less cost … and more value for you.
Look around. You’ll notice rectangular metal tubing in Westmoreland buildings, canopies, artwork and elsewhere. Its simple symmetry has its own beauty … which makes it a favorite of those who first envision the structures.
Contact Max Weiss Company for all your rectangular tube bending, both rectangular and square. You’ll marvel at our careful precision and flawless results. You might even call it a thing of beauty.