In conventional metal forming — turning, milling, and drilling — manufacturers begin with a solid billet or bar stock and cut away material until the desired shape is achieved. This subtractive process is often referred to as "start big, cut down," and it comes at a significant cost.
On average, 30% to 60% of the original raw material ends up as metallic chips or scrap — waste that must be collected, processed, and sold back at a fraction of its original value. For high-volume production of fasteners, bolts, and precision components, this represents a substantial and recurring loss.
The bottom line: every chip on the floor represents money that could have stayed in the part — and in your margins.
Cold heading (also called cold forming or cold forging) is a net-shape and near-net-shape manufacturing process. Instead of cutting material away, a cold heading machine applies controlled compressive force to reshape a metal blank at room temperature, causing the metal to flow into a die cavity and take on the exact geometry of the finished part.
No chips. No waste. No material lost on the floor.
Here is how the cold heading process achieves near-zero waste:
Cold Heading vs. Conventional Machining — Side-by-Side Comparison:
| Metric | Conventional Machining | Cold Heading |
|---|---|---|
| Material Utilization | 40–70% | 90–99% |
| Chip / Scrap Waste | High (30–60%) | Near zero |
| Part Strength | Standard | Enhanced (fiber flow) |
| Production Speed | Moderate | Very high (100–400 pcs/min) |
| Energy Consumption | Higher | Lower |
| Surface Finish | Requires finishing | Excellent, near-net-shape |
Cold heading achieves material utilization of 90–99% — compared to 40–70% in conventional machining. For a production run of one million parts, that difference translates directly to raw material savings that compound across every batch.
Cold heading is not simply a manufacturing technique — it is a fundamentally different approach to metal forming. By displacing and shaping material rather than cutting it away, the cold heading process achieves material utilization rates that conventional machining cannot match. The result is less scrap, lower raw material costs, stronger parts, and higher throughput.
For manufacturers producing fasteners, bolts, pins, rivets, or any high-volume precision metal component, switching to cold forming is one of the highest-impact decisions available for reducing waste and improving profitability.
Our cold heading machines are built to deliver on that promise — stroke after stroke, shift after shift.
Contact us today for a free process review and a no-obligation quote tailored to your part and production volume.