People in Oregon say “Control” is often the margin between success and failure.
Nowhere is this more visible than in bending and rolling W-beams in Oregon.
Controlling distortion is what it’s all about. A small miscalculation, or a moment’s slip, can generate ripples in the metal. The tighter the radius, the more control needed.
It’s not a negligible concern. Wide flange beam bending is integral to many types of structural non-residential construction in Oregon: offices, stadiums, canopies, cylindrical tanks, OEM parts and many more.
Lose control, and you’re facing delays, frustration … and cost.
Measuring precisely, especially for tight tolerances, is beyond important. As metal comes out of the machine, the steel bender has to be prepared to react – and grasp how. Undesirable attributes can suddenly appear if the beam isn’t flat, square and true to radius. Control needs to be reasserted – and soon.
Where do you locate the control needed for successful W-beam bending serving businesses in Oregon?
Max Weiss Company is your one-source answer for accurate, on-time wide flange beam bending – the tighter the radius, the better. We have unrivaled experience bending 6” x 9# WF beams HW and EW, 8” x 58# WF beams HW and EW, 12” x 16# WF beams HW and EW, and 12” x 65# WF beams HW and EW.
Does your Oregon project need larger sizes? No problem. Max Weiss Company bends 16” x 36# WF beams HW and EW, and 18” x 35# WF beams HW and EW, and 21” x 44# WF beams HW and EW, and 27” x 94# WF beams HW and EW.
Our practiced professionals, using state-of-the-art equipment, will take on your most challenging wide flange beam bending and rolling needs.
See, the solution lies in incremental bending. Accurate tooling on the flange and web are critical. While a slower process than rolling, incremental bending better manages distortion and deformation, and achieves much tighter radii.
Not all Oregon metal bending companies do incremental bending, however … which means they might not have the capacity to provide what you need.
You’ll never hit this scenario with Max Weiss Company. Besides an ultra-accurate DAVI rolling machine for larger radius projects, Max Weiss has numerous pieces of proprietary equipment that can achieve amazingly tight bends.
We bend wide flange beams from 4 inches to 27 inches, both easy way and hard way.
We don’t just bend steel W-beams, either. If your project requires S beam, aluminum or stainless steel bending, our adaptable, veteran craftsman can satisfy your needs.
Contact Max Weiss Company for all your wide flange beam bending needs. We’ve got the people, equipment and – don’t forget – control to keep your Oregon projects on track.