Sheet Metal Materials Selection Guide

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Stamping and bending parts

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materials used in sheet metal stamping

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Sheet metal materials guide

Sheet Metal Materials Selection Guide: Aluminum, Stainless Steel, Carbon Steel and Copper Alloys

Sheet metal material selection affects cost, bending radius, strength, corrosion resistance, weldability, finishing, weight and dimensional stability. This guide compares common sheet metal materials including 5052, 5754, 6061, 6082 and 7075 aluminum, 304 and 316L stainless steel, DC01, S235, S355, C45 steel, brass and copper, with practical tables, charts and design advice for fabricated parts.

Sheet metal material tolerance and forming reference chart
The right sheet material should balance strength, bendability, corrosion resistance, finish and production cost.

How to Choose Sheet Metal Material

Choosing sheet metal is not just a strength calculation. A material that looks strong on paper may crack during bending, cost too much, corrode in the service environment or create finishing problems. The correct choice depends on how the part is cut, bent, welded, assembled, finished and used.

For a lightweight enclosure, aluminum 5052 may be better than 6061 because it bends more reliably. For a marine bracket, 316L stainless may be worth the cost because chloride corrosion is a real risk. For an indoor painted bracket, low-carbon steel may provide the best cost-performance balance. For electrical parts, copper or brass may be chosen for conductivity instead of strength.

Formability

Controls bend radius, cracking risk, flange length and springback during press brake forming.

Strength and stiffness

Controls load capacity, vibration, deflection and how thin the sheet can be.

Corrosion resistance

Determines whether the part needs stainless steel, anodizing, plating, powder coating or painting.

Metal strength chart for sheet metal material selection
Strength, stiffness and ductility should be considered together when selecting sheet metal.
Metal material products for sheet metal and CNC manufacturing
Different metals offer different density, corrosion resistance, forming and finishing behavior.
Engineering drawing showing sheet metal dimensions and tolerance requirements
Material choice should be shown clearly on the drawing together with thickness, finish and tolerances.
Quality inspection for sheet metal fabricated and machined components
Inspection confirms thickness, bend angle, hole position, flatness and surface finish after forming.
Surface finishing options for sheet metal materials
Surface finishing can change corrosion performance, appearance, thickness and assembly fit.
Surface finishing options for sheet metal materials
Surface finishing can change corrosion performance, appearance, thickness and assembly fit.

Sheet Metal Materials Comparison Table

The table below summarizes common sheet materials used for laser cutting, bending, punching, welding, PEM hardware installation, powder coating and precision fabrication.

MaterialKey advantagesFormabilityCorrosion resistanceCommon finishesTypical applications
Aluminum 5052Good fatigue strength, weldability and corrosion resistanceExcellentGoodAnodizing, powder coating, brushingEnclosures, brackets, panels, marine and food equipment
Aluminum 5754 / 5083Strong non-heat-treatable aluminum with marine corrosion resistanceGoodVery goodAnodizing, powder coating, mill finishMarine, transport, tanks, structural panels
Aluminum 6061 / 6082Higher strength and good machinabilityModerateGoodAnodizing, hard anodizing, powder coatingFrames, fixtures, machined-and-bent parts, structural components
Aluminum 7075Very high strength and low weightPoor to moderateModerateAnodizing, conversion coating, paintAerospace-style brackets and high-strength lightweight parts
Stainless steel 304General corrosion resistance and good formabilityGoodVery goodPassivation, brushing, polishing, bead blastingFood equipment, covers, medical, kitchen and industrial parts
Stainless steel 316LBetter chloride corrosion resistance than 304GoodExcellentPassivation, electropolishing, brushingMarine, chemical, medical and harsh environment parts
DC01 cold rolled steelEconomical, ductile and easy to formExcellentPoor without coatingZinc plating, powder coating, paintingIndoor brackets, covers, appliance and electronic hardware
S235 / S355 structural steelGood strength, weldability and low costGoodPoor without coatingGalvanizing, powder coating, paintingFrames, machine guards, supports, welded structures
C45 / medium carbon steelHigher strength and wear potentialLimitedPoor without coatingBlack oxide, plating, heat treatmentWear plates, levers, stronger mechanical parts
Brass / copper sheetConductivity, corrosion resistance and decorative appearanceGood depending on temperGoodPolishing, tin, nickel, silver or clear coatingElectrical contacts, bus bars, shields and decorative panels

Typical Sheet Thickness and Bend Radius Parameters

Material groupCommon thickness rangeTypical inside bend radiusMinimum hole distance from bendNotes
Aluminum 50520.8-4.0 mm0.5T-1.0T2.5T + RGood choice when bending quality is important.
Aluminum 6061-T61.0-6.0 mm2.0T-3.0T3.0T + RUse larger radii to reduce cracking.
Stainless steel 304 / 316L0.5-5.0 mm1.5T-2.5T2.5T + RHigher springback and forming force than mild steel.
Low carbon steel / DC010.5-6.0 mm0.5T-1.0T2.5T + REconomical and easy to form, but needs coating for corrosion.
S235 / S355 steel1.0-8.0 mm1.0T-2.0T3.0T + RGood for stronger brackets and welded structures.
Brass / copper0.3-3.0 mm0.5T-1.5T2.5T + RTemper and grain direction strongly affect cracking risk.

T = material thickness. R = inside bend radius. These values are starting points and should be confirmed with the fabricator’s tooling and material stock.

Relative Material Performance Chart

The chart below gives a practical comparison for early material selection. Higher bars are not always better; the best material is the one that fits the application, forming method and finishing requirement.

5052 aluminum

Forming

6061 aluminum

Strength

304 stainless

Corrosion

316L stainless

Marine

DC01 steel

Low cost

Copper/brass

Conduct.

Mechanical Properties Reference Table

MaterialApprox. densityElastic modulusYield strength rangeElongation tendencySelection meaning
Aluminum 50522.68 g/cm3~70 GPa66-221 MPaGoodLightweight and bend-friendly.
Aluminum 60612.70 g/cm3~70 GPa110-240 MPaModerateHigher strength but needs larger bend radius.
Aluminum 70752.81 g/cm3~72 GPa145-475 MPaLow to moderateVery strong but not ideal for tight bends.
Stainless steel 3047.9 g/cm3~200 GPa260-270 MPaHighGood corrosion resistance and forming.
Stainless steel 316L8.0 g/cm3~200 GPa~225 MPaGoodBetter for chloride or marine environments.
DC01 low carbon steel7.85 g/cm3~210 GPa~140-280 MPaGoodEconomical for formed and coated parts.
S355 structural steel7.85 g/cm3~210 GPa~355 MPaModerateStronger option for load-bearing brackets.
Copper C1108.9 g/cm3~110 GPa~70-220 MPaGoodChosen for electrical and thermal conductivity.

Design Rules by Material Type

1

Aluminum

Use 5052 for bending, 6061 for stronger machined features and 7075 only when strength matters more than formability.

2

Stainless

Use 304 for general corrosion resistance and 316L for marine, chemical or chloride environments.

3

Steel

Use DC01 for formed low-cost parts, S235/S355 for structures and coated finishes to prevent rust.

4

Copper alloys

Use copper or brass when conductivity, shielding, solderability or decorative appearance drives the design.

  • Choose material before finalizing bend radius, flat pattern and hole-to-bend distances.
  • Use larger bend radii for hard aluminum, stainless steel and high-strength steels.
  • Confirm whether the material will be welded, riveted, clinched, tapped or fitted with PEM hardware.
  • Define surface finish early because anodizing, powder coating, plating and passivation affect design choices.
  • Use realistic formed tolerances instead of CNC machining tolerances for bend angles and flange dimensions.
  • For cosmetic parts, define visible surfaces, grain direction, brushing direction and color expectations.

Material Selection by Application

ApplicationRecommended materialsWhyFinish suggestion
Lightweight enclosure5052 aluminum, 5754 aluminumGood bending, low weight, corrosion resistanceAnodizing or powder coating
Indoor mounting bracketDC01 steel, S235 steelLow cost and good formabilityPowder coating, zinc plating or painting
Food or medical cover304 stainless, 316L stainlessCorrosion resistance and cleanabilityBrushed, passivated or electropolished
Marine or chemical panel316L stainless, 5083 aluminumBetter corrosion resistance in harsh environmentsPassivation, anodizing or protective coating
High strength lightweight part6061, 6082, 7075 aluminumStrength-to-weight performanceAnodizing or hard anodizing
Electrical bus bar or shieldCopper, brass, tin-plated copperConductivity and solderabilityTin, nickel, silver or clear protective coating

FAQ: Sheet Metal Materials

What is the best aluminum for sheet metal bending?

5052 aluminum is one of the best common choices for sheet metal bending because it has good formability, corrosion resistance and weldability. 6061 is stronger but usually needs a larger bend radius.

What is the difference between 304 and 316L stainless steel sheet?

304 stainless is a general-purpose corrosion-resistant stainless steel. 316L contains molybdenum and is better for marine, chemical and chloride environments.

Which sheet metal material is the cheapest?

Low-carbon steel such as DC01 or S235 is often the most economical for formed brackets and covers, but it usually needs painting, powder coating or plating to resist corrosion.

Can 6061 aluminum sheet be bent?

Yes, but 6061-T6 has lower bendability than 5052. It usually needs a larger inside bend radius and careful grain direction control to reduce cracking.

What sheet metal is best for outdoor parts?

For outdoor parts, common choices include powder-coated steel, anodized aluminum, 304 stainless and 316L stainless. The best option depends on corrosion exposure, cost, strength and appearance.

Need help choosing sheet metal material?

Send your drawing, material target, thickness, finish, quantity and application environment. Milemetal can review bendability, tolerance, strength and finishing options before production.

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