Skip to main content

NLMK develops new thinner plate steel product

Belgium-based steel producer NLMK Clabecq has developed a new thickness for its Quard steel product range. This development follows on from the firm’s heavy investment in its steel rolling facility. The surface quality of this plate steel is said to be very high also and the firm claims that the finish of steel from rivals has a rougher finish. Marketing manager Bernard Robins said, “It enables us to produce thin plates with thicknesses from 3.2mm.” and he added, “We are the only ones in the world able t
February 10, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
NLMK’s new steel plates offer high workability
Belgium-based steel producer 2323 NLMK Clabecq has developed a new thickness for its Quard steel product range. This development follows on from the firm’s heavy investment in its steel rolling facility. The surface quality of this plate steel is said to be very high also and the firm claims that the finish of steel from rivals has a rougher finish.

Marketing manager Bernard Robins said, “It enables us to produce thin plates with thicknesses from 3.2mm.” and he added, “We are the only ones in the world able to produce that thickness with our width.”

Robins also said that the steel has a very homogenous grain pattern right across the plate and added, “When you cut it, the reaction is more predictable. It takes less time to cut a piece than steel from our competitors.”

The steel is said to be easier to work and is produced in a high speed production process that allows the firm to meet customer demand quickly. Because NLMK Clabecq produces the plate in wider sections than its competitors, Robins said that this offers additional benefits. For dump body construction for example, it allows the manufacture of flat floor bodies for some applications, without the need to weld two plates along the centre and reduces manufacturing time and cost.

The company is also carrying out testing of new grades of its wear-resistant Quard and Quend structural steel grades at present, with testing being carried out in partnership with some key customers.
All videos

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Purdue University creates soybean sealant, Fluid iSoylator, for concrete
    October 9, 2015
    Researchers at Purdue University in the United States have developed a hydrophobic sealant that could prevent potentially damaging fluids from entering concrete pores. Paul Imbrock, founder and president of Environmental Concrete Products – the university’s spin-off company - said the firm’s Fluid iSoylator product can be used to protect new and existing concrete. "Our product is absorbed into dry concrete's pore network to create a hydrophobic barrier that prevents potentially damaging fluids from en
  • Global pressures driving bitumen developments
    June 19, 2015
    A raft of global pressures is driving developments in the materials and equipment we use for the handling, storage and treatment of bitumen. The goal is to achieve better performance and longer life for less financial outlay, and at the same time overcome the challenges of inconsistent and varying bitumen supplies. Kristina Smith reports.
  • US RCC paving job carried out with Volvo CE machines
    October 21, 2016
    US contractor Conewago Enterprises is using a paver from Volvo CE to lay a roller-compacted concrete (RCC) surface at the Liberty Trust distribution centre in Shippensburg, Pennsylvania. This facility lies close to Interstate-81, which runs through the Appalachian Mountains from the Canada-US border to Tennessee. This 1,376km route carries heavy truck traffic and as a result, hundreds of distribution warehouses have being constructed along the route of this busy transport corridor. Conewago Enterpris
  • Milling machine developments to boost efficiency
    October 20, 2016
    A series of developments in the milling machine market will give customers both greater choice and performance – Mike Woof writes. Competition is heating up in the market for milling machines, which has been dominated for many years by Wirtgen. The German firm still retains a strong share of this market, but is now facing much tougher levels of competition from key rivals, and Atlas Copco, BOMAG, Caterpillar and Roadtec in particular. Meanwhile the market is also seeing the return of another familiar nam