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WIRE
6/2007 November
 
 
 The red hot wire leaves the rolling line.<br>
The red hot wire leaves the rolling line.
Photos: Ceratizit
 The rolls form the steel in several passes<br>
The rolls form the steel in several passes
 René Mauer (left-hand side) at a discussion in the production department of Ceratizit in Luxembourg<br>
René Mauer (left-hand side) at a discussion in the production department of Ceratizit in Luxembourg
 The slabs or steel billets come from the steel plant and are transported to the special furnace<br>
The slabs or steel billets come from the steel plant and are transported to the special furnace
 The wire is coiled and stored or directly transported to the customers<br>
The wire is coiled and stored or directly transported to the customers
WIRE PRODUCTION

From the steel billet to the piano string

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Demands on roll technology have notably increased in the past years: roll speed is rising and Computer Aided Management (CAM) allows ever higher tonnages. In order to respond to the new developments in hot rolling technology Ceratizit has created the new 'E'-family of grades. A report about the Ceratizit customer STFS in Schifflange/Luxembourg. René Mauer is the segment manager for hot rolls in the business segment wear parts for general industrial wear parts at Ceratizit in Luxembourg. Today he is going to STFS in Schifflange. The company has a hot rolling line which is equipped with carbide from Ceratizit.

In this hall STFS produces wire with diameters ranging from 5.5 to 16 millimetres. The wire is then sent as semi-finished material to companies in the most varied industrial sectors who process the wire to produce cables and wire for bridges, lifts and cable cars, shopping carts, piano strings, nails and Steelcord for tyres.

From rolling stock to wire

The entire process starting from the rolling stock and resulting in the wire does not take longer than about two minutes. Per year STFS produces around 700,000 tons of wire in 3-shift operation; with a diameter of 5.5 millimetres this corresponds to a length of around 3 million kilometres, or in other words, 75 times around the earth. STFS's main sales market is France (50%), followed by Italy and Luxembourg.

The hot rolling procedure

Rolling is a forming procedure, either for the production of flat products like strips, foils or sheet metal, or for long products like profiled sections, rails, tubes, wire or rods. Contrary to cold rolling, in the hot rolling process the base material is heated to 1,250°C in special furnaces (walking beam furnace).

Rolling carbide: forming process and guides

After heating the slabs (first form of the steel resulting after the production process in a liquid condition), their size and shape are formed repeatedly and converted into electrically driven rolls. During the rolling process the red hot material has a temperature between 720° and 980° Celsius, depending on the quality and diameter of the steel.

The latest developments in the field of hot rolling

Hot rolling is a procedure consisting of various forming processes, the so called roll passes. Every roll pass increases the length and simultaneously reduces the thickness of the rolling stock and leads to the 'destruction' of the original structure. The fact that the rolling stock is heated causes its crystallographic condition to change.
When processing steel the structure is changed from the hard ferritic to the soft austenitic form. In this condition the plastic deformation takes place, deformation grades of up to 250:1 are possible. This is why a slab may have a thickness of 240mm before hot rolling and afterwards of only 0.8mm. In cold rolling the maximum deformation grade is 10:1. In addition, when hot rolling the required deformation can also be reached more easily.
The steps in the rolling process
1. The slabs or steel billets come from the steel plant and are transported to the special furnace.
2. The slabs are heated to 1,250° Celsius.
3. The rolls form the red hot steel until, at the end of the line (length of almost 500 metres) the wire exits.
4. The wire is coiled, stored or transported to the customers.
Ceratizit produces two different types of products for hot rolling lines: firstly, the work rolls, i.e. the parts of the line which form the material under rolling pressure, and secondly the guide rollers which transport the red hot material over the very long line from one machine part to the next. Also in this procedure the advantages of the carbide can be seen very clearly: the hot rolling process is carried out at high temperatures and high speed, i.e. up to 14,700RPM for the work rolls and 50,930 RPM for the guide rollers. Machine parts which are subject to such conditions show a very high degree of wear.
Ceratizit offers 9,000 products for rolls and guides for a variety of hot rolling lines. The team of Philippe Lanners at the Ceratizit site in Mamer/Luxembourg is responsible for the production of the carbide components for over 100 customers in the hot rolling sector.
In the past years rolling technology has witnessed numerous changes:
1. Controlled cooling or low temperature rolls for the improvement of the rolling stock's properties.
2. Higher roll speed.
3. Application of a 'Reducing-Sizing' mini-block for small tolerances while rolling.
4. Computer Aided Management (CAM) for rolling programmes to produce precisely consistent tonnages per week.
Ceratizit has adapted all its carbide grades to these conditions and has developed the new 'E'-family. The objective is to provide better resistance to mechanical shock and crack propagation without decreasing the performance of the rolling mill.
The properties of the new 'E'-family from Ceratizit
– Slightly larger grain size as the smallest grain size has been eliminated from the micro-structure
– Regular grain size distribution, so chains of the smallest particles in the micro-structure are avoided
– Thanks to these improvements the internal tension is reduced
– Higher toughness, therefore lower hardness of around 40-50HV (Vickers)


Ceratizit S.A. Ceratizit Luxembourg Sàrl
Route de Holzem, 101
8201 Mamer/Luxembourg
Tel.: +352 312085-1
Fax: +352 311911
E-Mail: info@ceratizit.com
Website

Internet: http://www.ceratizit.com
Ceratizit Austria Gesellschaft m.b.H.
6600 Reutte/Austria
Tel.: +43 5672 200-0
Fax: +43 5672 200-502
E-Mail: info.austria@ceratizit.com
Website

Internet: http://www.ceratizit.at
 
 
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