Deep Draw Stamping Services for Seamless Metal Components

Form complex, high-strength parts from a single sheet — with no weld seams, no assembly joints, and no weak points. Our hydraulic presses up to 1,200 tons and in-house tooling deliver deep drawn components ready for demanding applications.

Leading companies we support

What Is Deep Draw Stamping?

Deep draw stamping is a metal forming process that transforms a flat sheet metal blank into a seamless, three-dimensional shape. A punch forces the blank into a die cavity, progressively forming the material into cups, cylinders, boxes, and other hollow shapes, all from a single piece of metal.

The process is called “deep” drawing because the finished part’s depth typically equals or exceeds its diameter. Unlike welded or joined assemblies, deep drawn parts have no seams, no potential leak paths, no weld-weakened zones, and no assembly steps to manage.

Why does this matter to your project?

When your application requires a sealed, structurally sound enclosure — an oil tank, a motor housing, a sensor case — deep drawing produces it in fewer steps, with better structural integrity, and at lower per-unit cost than fabrication and welding.

Deep draw stamping is one of several precision metal stamping processes we offer, alongside progressive die stamping and transfer stamping.

How Deep Drawing Works

Flat Blank
Cupping
Drawing
Finished Part

Each stage progressively increases depth while maintaining seamless,
single-piece construction

Our Deep Draw Stamping Capabilities

Your part requirements determine the press, the tooling, and the process. Here’s what we bring to your project.

1,200
Tons
Rongcheng Hydraulic
Bed: 5,000 × 1,800mm
800
Tons
Xieduan Hydraulic
Bed: 4,000 × 1,600mm
800
Tons
YzS Hydraulic
Bed: 3,000 × 2,000mm
600
Tons × 2
Hydraulic Press
Standard Format
0.5 – 6.0mm
Material Thickness Range
2,000 × 1,200mm
Maximum Part Size
±0.1mm
General Tolerance
±0.05mm
Critical Dimension Tolerance
AutoForm
Draw Simulation Software
150M+
Annual Stamping Capacity

Why Choose Deep Draw Stamping?

Deep drawing solves specific manufacturing problems better than alternative methods. Here’s when it makes sense for your project.

Seamless Construction Eliminates Failure Points

A deep drawn part is one piece of metal — no weld seams, no brazed joints. For pressurized housings and sealed enclosures, this means zero potential leak paths.

Strain Hardening Strengthens the Material

As the metal flows into the die cavity, it work-hardens. Your finished part is stronger than the original sheet — without secondary heat treatment.

Near-Net-Shape Reduces Material Waste

Deep drawing uses most of the blank in the finished part. Compared to machining from solid stock, you use less raw material and generate less scrap.

Automated Consistency at Volume

Once tooling is validated, the press runs the same cycle every time. ±0.1mm dimensional consistency whether you order 1,000 or 100,000 parts.

Single-Piece Construction Eliminates Assembly

A deep drawn housing replaces three or four fabricated pieces welded together. Fewer parts, fewer suppliers, fewer operations, lower cost.

Deep Drawn Parts We Produce

These are real production parts from our factory. Each one demonstrates a different deep draw application we deliver for our clients worldwide.

Materials for Deep Draw Stamping

Material selection directly affects formability, cost, and performance. Here are the materials we draw most frequently.

Cold-Rolled Steel
SPCC · SPCD · SPCE

Most common. Excellent formability, cost-effective. For enclosures, tanks, and structural housings.

Stainless Steel
SUS304 · SUS430

Corrosion resistance without coating. Food equipment, medical, outdoor applications.

Aluminum
1100 · 3003 · 5052

Lightweight. Good thermal conductivity for heat sinks and electronic enclosures.

Galvanized Steel
SGCC · DX51D

Pre-coated corrosion resistance. HVAC components and outdoor equipment.

Copper & Brass
C11000 · C26000

Electrical & thermal conductivity for connectors and thermal management.

Not sure which material fits? Our engineering team provides free material recommendations during DFM review.

Design Guidelines for Deep Drawn Parts

Good design makes deep drawing more reliable and cost-effective. These five principles help you get better parts at lower cost.

1
Manage Draw Ratios

A single-stage draw handles depth up to 2× the part diameter. Deeper parts require multi-stage drawing. Keeping depth within limits reduces tooling investment.

2
Use Generous Corner Radii

Internal corner radii should be at least 3× material thickness. Tight corners restrict material flow and cause thinning or tearing.

3
Expect Wall Thickness Variation

The base stays near original thickness while walls thicken ~10% near the top. This is inherent to the process. Secondary ironing can control uniformity if needed.

4
Include Draft Angles

A 1–3° taper from bottom to top helps the part release from the die. Without draft, parts stick and surface finish suffers.

5
Add Features After the Draw

Holes, slots, ribs, and threads should be added in secondary stations — after the primary draw. Features placed before drawing will distort.

Free DFM Review

Send your CAD files and our engineers will run AutoForm simulation to validate formability before tooling begins.

Deep Draw vs. Alternative Methods

Choosing the right forming method depends on your part geometry, volume, and performance requirements.

Factor Deep Draw Welded Assembly Metal Spinning Machined from Solid
Part Integrity ✓ Seamless Weld seams present Seamless Solid
Strength ✓ Strain-hardened Heat-affected zones Good Original material
Best Volume ✓ 1,000+ parts Any volume Low–medium Low volume
Material Efficiency ✓ High Moderate Moderate Low (high scrap)
Unit Cost at Volume ✓ Lowest Moderate Higher Highest
Tooling Investment Moderate–high Low Low Minimal
Complexity Moderate–high High Axisymmetric only Very high

For low-volume enclosures under 500 pieces, our sheet metal fabrication services may be a better fit.

Industries We Serve with Deep Drawn Parts

HVAC & Appliance

Compressor housings, burner components, motor enclosures, inner bowls, sealed construction prevents leaks.

Automotive

Structural brackets, sensor housings, battery enclosures, relay cases.

Industrial Equipment

Oil tanks, hydraulic reservoirs, motor housings, pump components for demanding environments.

Consumer Products

Cookware, stove parts, and BBQ accessories

From Your Design to Delivered Parts

Every deep draw project follows the same structured process. You know exactly what happens at each stage.

DFM Analysis
AutoForm simulation to validate feasibility
24 hrs
Tool & Die
In-house CNC, wire EDM, precision grinding
4–6 wks
Prototype & FAI
Sample approval with dimensional report
Production
Automated press line with in-process monitoring
Finishing
Trimming, deburring, surface treatment — all in-house
QC & Delivery
Final inspection, packaging, worldwide shipping
2–3 wks repeat

FAQ

Common Questions

Answers to the most frequent questions from procurement managers and design engineers evaluating progressive die stamping.

What is progressive die stamping?

Progressive die stamping is a metal forming process where a coil of sheet metal feeds through a single die containing multiple stations. Each station performs a specific operation — piercing, bending, forming, or cutting — and the strip advances one step with every press stroke. The result is a finished part produced with every cycle, making it one of the most efficient methods for high-volume metal component production.

In progressive die stamping, the workpiece stays attached to the carrier strip throughout the entire forming sequence. In transfer die stamping, the part is separated from the strip at the first station and mechanically transferred between independent die stations. Progressive dies work best for small-to-large parts that can remain on a strip. Transfer dies are better suited for very large parts or geometries requiring deep draws that exceed strip-based forming limits.

We process carbon steel, stainless steel, galvanized steel, pre-painted steel, aluminum alloys, copper, and brass in progressive dies. Material thickness ranges from 0.5mm to 6.0mm. Material selection depends on your part’s mechanical requirements, corrosion environment, and downstream finishing — our engineers recommend the optimal grade during DFM review.

Standard tolerance is ±0.10mm. Precision tolerance of ±0.05mm is achievable on critical dimensions, depending on material type, part geometry, and die design. Tolerance capability is confirmed during the DFM review stage before tooling begins.

Progressive die stamping is most cost-effective at annual volumes above 50,000 parts, where the tooling investment is offset by low per-part production cost. However, we accept programs starting from 10,000 units per year when the part geometry justifies the tooling investment. No minimum order for quoting.

Tooling lead time ranges from 4 to 12 weeks depending on die complexity, number of stations, and part geometry. Simple dies with fewer stations can be completed in as few as 4 weeks. Complex multi-station dies for large parts may take 10–12 weeks. Because we build all tooling in-house, we eliminate the delays associated with outsourced die fabrication.

Yes. We operate a 525-meter powder coating line in-house and manage electroplating, anodizing, e-coating, and other surface treatments. Most stamped parts leave our facility fully finished, eliminating the need for you to coordinate secondary vendors. See our surface finishing capabilities for details.

Yes. Every project begins with a free DFM review. Our engineers evaluate your part design for progressive die feasibility, recommend material selection, identify cost-reduction opportunities, and suggest design modifications that improve manufacturability. We provide detailed engineering feedback within 24 hours. See our engineering support page for file format details and submission process.

We accept STEP, IGES, SolidWorks, Pro/E (Creo), AutoCAD (DWG/DXF), and PDF technical drawings. 3D models with 2D drawings showing dimensions and tolerances give us the most complete information for accurate quoting.

Related Stamping Services

Tool & Die Engineering

In-house CNC, wire EDM, and precision grinding. We design and build your stamping dies with faster iterations and tighter quality control.

Progressive Die Stamping

High-speed continuous strip stamping for flat and shallow-formed parts with multiple features — holes, bends, tabs — in a single press stroke.

Secondary Operations

Tapping, riveting, hardware insertion, sub-assembly, and inspection — everything needed to turn your stamped parts into production-ready components.

Surface Finishing

Powder coating, electroplating, anodizing, and polishing, applied to your deep drawn parts in-house or through our managed finishing network.

Ready to Start Your Deep Draw Project?

Send us your CAD files and requirements. Our engineering team will review your design, confirm feasibility, and deliver a detailed quote, including DFM analysis within 24 hours.

Get A Quote For Your Project Now

Send us your drawings or requirements, our engineering team will respond within 24 hours with a solution, detailed quotation, and manufacturability suggestions.

*We respect your privacy, all your information will be kept confidential.

Tell us about your project

We’ll match you with the right engineer and respond within 12 hours.

Get A Quote For Your Project Now

Send us your drawings or requirements, our engineering team will respond within 24 hours with a solution, detailed quotation, and manufacturability suggestions.

*We respect your privacy, all your information will be kept confidential.