



PRODUCT INFO


WIDE FLANGE:
Is a structural steel shape with I (or H) form which is commonly made of structural steel but may also be formed from aluminum or other materials. Top and bottom plates of a W shape are named as flanges and the vertical plate which connects the flanges is named as web. In wide flange beams, flanges are nearly parallel to each other.
CHANNEL BAR:
Is a rolled steel or iron shape having a U shaped cross section, with two narrower sides at right angles to a broader one. It is also an iron bar or beam having a section resembling a flat gutter or channel

SHEET PILES:
Are interlocking rolled-steel sections driven vertically into the ground to serve as sheeting in an excavation or to cut off the flow of groundwater. Furthermore, it is a metal designed and constructed to resist the lateral pressure of soil when there is a desired change in ground elevation that exceeds the angle of repose of the soil.

STEEL RAILS:
Are hot rolled steel of a specific cross sectional profile. Typically the cross section (profile) approximates to an I-beam but is asymmetric about a horizontal axis. This is also one of a pair of long, parallel and continuous steel bars on which the wheels of trains run.

ANGLE BARS:
An iron or a steel structural bar that has an L-shaped cross section. A length of steel or iron bent at a right angle along its long dimension, used as a support or structural framework. An upright bar at the angle where two faces of a polygonal or bay window meet.

MS PLATES:
Refers to low carbon steel; typically the AISI grades 1005 through 1025, which are usually used for structural applications. With too little carbon content to through harden, it is weldable, which expands the possible applications. Used in nearly every type of product created from steel, it is weldable, very hard and, although it easily rusts, very durable. Containing a maximum of 0.29% carbon, this type of steel is able to be magnetized and used in almost any project that requires a vast amount of metal. Its structural strength prevents it from being used to create load-bearing girders and structural beams.

PIPES:
A tubular section or hollow cylinder, usually but not necessarily of circular cross-section, used mainly to convey substances which can flow — liquids and gases (fluids), slurries, powders and masses of small solids. It can also be used for structural applications; hollow pipe is far stiffer per unit weight than solid members. It is manufactured in any of a large number of steel alloys, either extruded (seamless) or welded (with in a seam). Its wall thickness ranges from Schedule 10 (lightest) to Schedule 160 (heaviest).

GRINDING BALLS:
Is a type of grinder used to grind materials into extremely fine powder for use in mineral dressing processes, paints, pyrotechnics, ceramics and selective laser sintering.

FLAT BAR:
Is a type of steel product displaying rectangle section, while using the range of size from 12 for you to 300 mm and this of thickness coming from 4 to 60mm. The specification can be described by the system of thickness*width. Flat bar can be either used since hot-rolled finished product or service or billet minimize from plate.


REINFORCEMENT BAR:
A reinforcing bar manufactured with surface deformations to provide bonding strength when embedded in concrete. A steel bar used in concrete construction that provides additional strength; the bars are deformed with patterns made during the rolling process.
STEEL MATTING:
Is an electric fusion welded prefabricated joined grid consisting of a series of parallel longitudinal wires with accurate spacing welded to cross wires at the required spacing. It is a metal wire screen that is made up of low carbon steel wire or stainless steel wire. It is available in various sizes and shapes.