What is the difference between cold-rolled and hot-rolled SPA-H weathering steel plates?

Dec 25, 2025 Deixe um recado

SPA-H is a Japanese standard (JIS G 3125) weathering steel grade, widely used in outdoor structural components. The core differences between its cold-rolled (CR) and hot-rolled (HR) versions lie in
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Hot-Rolled SPA-H Steel Plate Cold-Rolled SPA-H Steel Plate
Rolled above the steel's recrystallization temperature (≈1100–1250℃), then cooled naturally or controlled cooling. Rolled at room temperature using hot-rolled steel as the base material; cold deformation causes work hardening, often followed by annealing to adjust performance.
Generally 3–150 mm (thicker specifications available). Generally 0.3–3 mm (thin-gauge plates/strips).
Rough surface; may have oxide scales, rolling marks, or slight warpage. Oxide scales need removal (mechanical/chemical methods) for patina uniformity. Smooth, clean surface with high dimensional accuracy; no obvious oxide scales; excellent flatness and surface finish.
Ferrite-pearlite microstructure, no work hardening; balanced strength and ductility (yield strength >=235 MPa, elongation >=22%). Cold deformation refines grains and induces work hardening; higher strength (yield strength increases by 20–30% compared to hot-rolled) but slightly reduced ductility. Annealed cold-rolled plates can restore ductility while retaining fine-grain strength.
Oxide scales on the surface delay initial patina formation; uniform patina requires pre-treatment (shot blasting/descaling). The thick substrate ensures long-term corrosion resistance for load-bearing structures. Clean surface promotes fast, uniform patina formation without pre-treatment; suitable for decorative applications requiring consistent appearance.
Good weldability and formability; suitable for bending, cutting, and welding of large components. High hardness after cold rolling; poor cold bending performance (prone to cracking) if not annealed. Annealed plates have improved formability for precision parts.
Outdoor load-bearing structures: highway guardrails, containers, guide signs, building frames, and steel bridges. Thin-gauge decorative or precision components: architectural cladding panels, furniture parts, electronic device shells, and small outdoor signs.
Lower production cost; more economical for large-batch, thick-plate applications.

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