Recent International Trends in Continuous Galvanising
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 505 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1993
Abstract
The paper will review the marked upsurge in the installation of new  continuous metal coating lines, both hot dip and electrodeposition.  Although some of this new capacity has been replacement for obsolete  facilities or directed at traditional markets, eg building products,  consumer durables etc, by far the major portion is targeted at the  automotive industry. The reasons for the rapid growth of coated  automobile panels are discussed. A comparison of the installed capacity  with projections for this market indicate that a severe over-supply  situation has arisen. Many coatings are now available for the automotive industry, each  with their own strengths and weaknesses, but none as yet wholly  satisfactory. Coating development has mainly been cost driven. This  favours hot dipped coatings, providing surface quality and pressing  problems can be overcome. The high cost per unit thickness of  electrodeposited coatings has also seen pure zinc coatings being replaced  by thinner, more corrosion resistant alloy coatings such as zinc-nickel and  zinc-iron. Recently resin overlays have been introduced to improve the  performance of electrodeposited coatings. Developments in coatings for the more traditional markets will be  described. The fastest growing market in the last decade has been  prepainted product for the building industry. This has led to the  installation of extra painting capacity and again it appears an excess  capacity situation has occurred. Over the same period the traditional zinc  coatings have continued to lose market share to the zinc/aluminium alloy  coatings, Galvalume and Galfan. These have been joined recently by  '1'aiyo Crack-Free which has been taken up by some metal coaters.  Galvalume is now widely accepted as being the best available coating for  unpainted applications. It is also suggested that 'spin-off' coatings from  automotive developments might find a niche in the consumer durable  market. The end users of coated products, particularly the automotive industry,  have demanded improvements in quality, such as surface smoothness,  formability, etc. At the same time the new coating lines have to process  wider strip and run at faster speeds. To reconcile these somewhat  incompatible needs has required numerous process improvements, many  of which need in-line instrumentation and computer control. The more  important of these changes are discussed briefly. Finally the paper will describe the recent developments which have  occurred in continuous galvanising in Australia and put them into context  with the rest of the world.
Citation
APA: (1993) Recent International Trends in Continuous Galvanising
MLA: Recent International Trends in Continuous Galvanising. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1993.
