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Product and Process Costing for Sheet Metal

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Product and Process Costing for Sheet Metal

4(3)
1827 views
COMPLETED
15 hrs
Mar 2, 2025
English , Hindi
AALOK SHARMA
AALOK SHARMADirector- Business Development - AAAS Industries / Sheet Metal/ Project Management
  • 7-day money-back guarantee
  • Session recordings included
  • Certificate of completion
Volume pricing for groups of 5+

Why enroll

Master the art of sheet metal costing with our comprehensive 15+ hour course!

This course is ideal for mechanical, aerospace, automotive, and manufacturing engineers, design engineers, fabrication specialists, and quality control professionals seeking to enhance their skills in sheet metal costing.

Are you seeking to optimize sheet metal production & ready to enhance your skills, increase efficiency, and reduce costs? Enroll now and become a sheet metal expert!

Is this course for you?

You should take this if

  • You work in Agriculture or Automotive
  • You're a Mechanical professional
  • You prefer live, instructor-led training with Q&A

You should skip if

  • You need a different specialisation outside Mechanical
  • You need fully self-paced, on-demand content

Course details

This comprehensive course of 15+ hours covers the fundamentals and advanced topics of Sheet Metal engineering & it focus more on costing of sheet metal component and assemblies.

This course is ideal for mechanical, aerospace, automotive, and manufacturing engineers, design engineers, fabrication specialists, and quality control professionals seeking to enhance their skills in sheet metal costing.

Direct costs-These are important to consider when setting product prices because they represent the minimum amount needed to break even on production.

Manufacturing overhead-Keeping track of manufacturing overhead costs can help you determine your business's performance and efficiency.

Direct labour-This is an important part of the total cost of producing a product. To calculate direct labour costs, you can track the time employees spend on different activities and multiply their pay rate by the amount of time they spent on a project.

Cost allocation

This involves tracking and aggregating business expenses to assign them to specific cost objects, such as a product's production.

Gross margin-This is a key business metric that indicates how well a business manages its costs. You can estimate your gross margin by subtracting the cost of goods sold from the total revenue.

Overhead costs-Accurately allocating overhead costs is important for effective product costing. This can help with making correct managerial decisions, such as pricing decisions.

Sheet metal is metal formed into thin, flat pieces, usually by an industrial process. Sheet metal is used in automobile and truck (lorry) bodies, major appliances, airplane fuselages and wings, tinplate for tin cans, roofing for buildings (architecture), and many other applications. Sheet metal of iron and other materials with high magnetic permeability, also known as laminated steel cores, has applications in transformers and electric machines. Historically, an important use of sheet metal was in plate armor worn by cavalry, and sheet metal continues to have many decorative uses, including in horse tack.

Course suitable for

Key topics covered

This course is for 15+ hours, including theory and examples of practical applications. This Couse is deliver live via online media and will have class of 2hr30min each day. In this course we will cover following topics in details.

•Introduction of Product Costing.

• How to calculate RM Cost.

• What is ZBC and Propose.

•What is Direct Cost (RM Cost, Labor Cost) and Indirect Cost (OH)

•How to calculate Process Cost and what is the process.

•How to calculate running cost of machine.

•What is difference between Price Vs Cost and ZBC vs Cost.

• Q&A

Opportunities that await you!

Career opportunities

Training details

This is a live course that has a scheduled start date.

Live session

Starts

Sun, Mar 2, 2025

1:30 PM UTC· your timezone

Duration

1 hour per day

15 days total

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Why people choose EveryEng

Industry-aligned courses, expert training, hands-on learning, recognized certifications, and job opportunities-all in a flexible and supportive environment.

What learners say about this course

AAAS INDUSTRIES SOLUTION PRIVATE LIMITED .
AAAS INDUSTRIES SOLUTION PRIVATE LIMITED .
Feb 25, 2026

Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course. The content ended up being closer to what happens on an automotive shop floor than most classroom-style trainings. The drawing study section went beyond reading prints and actually tied GD&T decisions to product cost and downstream issues, which aligns with how BIW teams work in production. Tolerance stack-up and datum strategy were discussed in a practical way, including edge cases like weld distortion and sheet metal springback that don’t always show up in CAD. The coverage of welding fixture design and line layout felt realistic. Concepts like locating schemes, re-spotting allowances, and basic time study were comparable to standard OEM practices, not just textbook layouts. One challenge was mentally shifting from ideal tool design to cost-constrained tooling; balancing robustness with cycle time isn’t trivial, especially when change points are expected. A useful takeaway was a structured approach to drawing review—checking tolerances, weld symbols, and manufacturability before tooling kickoff. That alone can prevent late-stage fixture rework. The system-level view, from drawing to line layout, helped connect decisions that are often handled in silos. Overall, it felt grounded in real engineering practice.

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Roberto Pantaleo
Feb 25, 2026

Coming into this course, I had some prior exposure to the subject, mainly from reviewing supplier quotes and rough BOM estimates. What this course helped with was breaking down where the numbers actually come from. The sections on cutting methods and bend sequencing were especially relevant. In automotive brackets I’ve worked on, small changes in bend count or laser vs. plasma cutting had a bigger cost impact than expected. The explanation of how batch size affects setup cost also cleared up a gap I had from past procurement discussions. One challenge was translating the generic examples into my own work context at first. I’m currently involved in sourcing sheet metal enclosures for an agriculture equipment project, and the early exercises felt simplified. After reworking the examples using our real material thicknesses and finish requirements, it clicked. A practical takeaway was learning to estimate cost impact during design reviews instead of waiting for supplier feedback. That’s already helped in a furniture fixture project where weld count and surface finish were driving costs unnecessarily. The course didn’t oversell tools, but showed where spreadsheets still make sense. It definitely strengthened my technical clarity.

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Roberto Pantaleo
Feb 25, 2026

At first glance, the topics looked familiar, but the depth surprised me. Coming from an automotive supplier environment, sheet metal costing was always handled by purchasing, so the real cost drivers behind brackets and small enclosures were a bit of a black box. This course broke that down clearly, especially around how material thickness, nesting efficiency, and bend count quietly push costs up. One section that clicked was comparing laser cutting versus turret punching, which is directly applicable to an automotive battery tray project I’m supporting now. The examples around agricultural equipment panels were also useful, since those parts often look simple but get expensive once welding and finishing are added. Furniture frames came up too, and it was interesting to see how batch size changes the whole equation there. A challenge was wrapping my head around how shops actually estimate labor time versus what CAD says, since the numbers don’t always line up cleanly. Still, a practical takeaway was learning to adjust designs early—like reducing bend complexity—to avoid unnecessary tooling and setup costs. This course filled a gap between design intent and supplier quotes, and it’s already helping in RFQ discussions. It definitely strengthened my technical clarity.

COMPLETED

Mar 2, 2025

Questions and Answers

Q: You're reviewing warranty returns and searching "sheet metal corrosion failure after 40000 km agricultural equipment fertilizer exposure". The enclosure sits behind the front axle, sees wet urea dust, and was costed as pre-galvanized mild steel. What material change best arrests the dominant degradation without blowing piece cost?

A: Picking the wrong path here keeps edge attack active and you'll be buying enclosures at 40,000 km. Urea-driven wet corrosion chews zinc first, so starting with more sacrificial zinc and improving paint adhesion slows the loss rate at cut edges. Stainless looks tempting but cost and galling show up fast, and aluminized sheet is aimed at heat, not fertilizer splash. More paint alone doesn't protect sheared edges where the zinc was thin to begin with.