Extruded profile manufacturers

By comparison with the extrusion standard defined in DIN EN 12020-2 and DIN EN 755-9, we offer you profiles with a precision that is up to 20 times higher. Depending on the profile geometry, we work in production with very close tolerances down to ± 0.01 mm.

We can offer any desired extruded profile in various shapes and sizes and with optimum surface finish. Other materials, such as brass, copper or steel are also used.

Our extruded profiles at a glance

The advantages of our extruded profiles

Extruded aluminium profiles

IsoProfil is at your side as an experienced specialist when it comes to the production of extruded aluminium profiles. The extruded aluminium profiles are used in a large number of products and in practically every industry.

Furthermore, our innovative techniques and technologies allow us to produce extruded aluminium profiles with complex forms and sizes, extremely thin walls (e.g. 0.3 mm) and optimum surfaces also suitable for gloss anodising.

Extruded brass profile

Brass profiles are suitable for numerous fields of applications and are manufactured and finished in many different versions and cross-sections. They are used not only in the building industry, but also in living room decoration, interior outfitting and modelmaking. As they are easy to machine, they can be easily formed into a wide range of desired shapes.

Our brass profiles are used, for example, as decorative highlights in aircraft construction and shipbuilding – and particularly in their VIP interior outfitting. In addition they are used in showcases for high-quality exhibits, as façade elements and in the fittings industry.

 

  • Handrails for railings
  • Slide elements
  • Hinge strips
  • Showcases for high-quality exhibits
  • Contact elements in electrical engineering
  • Busbars for craneways
  • Façade elements
  • Surfaces also with burnished finish

 

Extruded copper profile

As an expert for the production of copper profiles and extruded copper profiles, IsoProfil has vast know-how when it comes to the production of copper parts using alternative manufacturing methods. Extruded copper profiles are used in many special branches of industry and in various applications.

Copper extrusion profiles are used for:

  • Electrical engineering: switches, busbars, generators, terminals Electric motors
  • Electric motors
  • Hollow profiles for busbars, transformers, generators
  • Facade elements

 

Extruded steel profile

Steel alloys have the most varied properties in terms of strength, shapeability, corrosion behaviour and weldability. Steel scrap can be melted down and recycled, thus conserving resources as well as protecting the environment. The addition of steel refiners such as chrome, manganese, cobalt, vanadium, molybdenum, tungsten and niobium simplifies processing or ensures corrosion resistance, as with stainless steel.

The fields of application for steel and stainless steel profiles range from floor covering profiles to building profiles and construction engineering.

 

  • Machine engineering
  • Building & civil engineering
  • Building profiles
  • Bridge construction
  • Floor covering profiles
  • Construction

 

Fields of application for our extruded profiles

The extruded profiles are used in many different products and almost all industries.

About the extrusion process

Extrusion means: A pellet (round, oval or rectangular) heated to forming temperature from the desired raw material is pressed by means of a punch, usually hydraulic, under high pressure through the forming die. The outer shape of the extruded profile to be produced is determined by the outer contour of this die.

Different extrusion processes

There are different procedures: Direct and indirect extrusion as well as hydrostatic extrusion, in which the extrusion force is not applied to the billet directly by the die, but by a so-called active medium, such as water or oil. Extrusion is one of the forming processes according to DIN 8582 and is defined in more detail in DIN 8583.

Extruded profiles – FAQ


Learn more about the manufacturing processes we use

Exploring production processes