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Sheet Metal Product Costing & Estimation

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Sheet Metal Product Costing & Estimation

4(3)
333 views
FREE
25 hrs
Next month
English
AALOK SHARMA
AALOK SHARMADirector- Business Development - AAAS Industries / Sheet Metal/ Project Management
  • Session recordings included
  • Certificate of completion
  • Anytime Learning
  • Learn from Industry Expert
Volume pricing for groups of 5+

Why enroll

Professionals enroll in the Sheet Metal Manufacturing & Costing – Module Outline course to gain practical skills in accurately estimating product costs, preparing competitive quotations, and improving profitability in fabrication businesses. The course helps production engineers, costing professionals, and entrepreneurs understand how manufacturing processes directly impact pricing, margins, and cost control. By learning structured costing methods, material optimization, machine time calculation, and overhead allocation, participants enhance their decision-making abilities, reduce estimation errors, and strengthen their career growth in the sheet metal industry.

Is this course for you?

You should take this if

  • You work in Manufacturing
  • You're a Mechanical professional
  • You have 3+ years of hands-on experience in this field
  • You prefer live, instructor-led training with Q&A

You should skip if

  • You're new to this field with no prior experience
  • You need a different specialisation outside Mechanical
  • You need fully self-paced, on-demand content

Course details

Sheet Metal Manufacturing & Costing is a comprehensive discipline that integrates engineering design, production processes, and financial analysis to determine the true cost and profitability of fabricated metal components. Sheet metal manufacturing involves a sequence of operations such as material selection, laser cutting or punching, bending, forming, welding, assembly, and surface finishing. Each stage contributes directly to the overall product cost through material consumption, machine time, tooling requirements, labor input, and overhead allocation. Effective costing requires accurate interpretation of engineering drawings, calculation of blank size and material yield, estimation of cycle times, setup time consideration, and assessment of scrap and rework risks. In addition, factors such as batch size, automation level, production efficiency, and supply chain fluctuations significantly influence cost outcomes. A structured costing approach not only supports competitive quotation preparation but also enables cost optimization through process improvement, waste reduction, and value engineering. By aligning manufacturing methods with financial analysis, sheet metal manufacturing and costing ensure sustainable pricing strategies, improved margins, and informed business decision-making in fabrication industries.

Course suitable for

Key topics covered

Introduction to Sheet Metal: Overview of sheet metal, types, and applications.

2.     Material Grades: Difference between CR (Cold Rolled) and HR (Hot Rolled) materials and common material grades.

3.     Main Processes: Stamping and fabrication techniques.

4.     Press Machines: Types (Mechanical, Pneumatic, Hydraulic) and how to select based on part requirements.

5.     Machine Costing: Calculating running costs and cost per stroke.

6.     Process Selection: Defining required processes based on part design.

7.     Tool Sizing: Determining appropriate tool sizes for parts.

8.     Material Utilization: Maximizing raw material yield to reduce waste.

9.     Raw Material Costing: Calculating material costs accurately.

10.  Tool Development: Practical approach to tool sizing and development.

11.  Cost Optimization: Reducing tooling and process costs.

12.  Rejection Costs: Understanding and minimizing rejection costs.

13.  Tolerances Impact: How part tolerances affect costs and managing them.

14.  Welding Costs: Calculating CO₂ welding costs and spot-welding costs.

15.  Overhead Costs: Managing rent, staff, and other operational costs.

16.  NVA Points: Identifying and optimizing non-value-added activities.

17.  Design Optimization: Reducing project costs through better product design.

18.  Product Costing

Opportunities that await you!

Career opportunities

Training details

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

Our Alumni Work At

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.

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