Products

/ Products
  • 3D TV

    3-D TV is a television display technology that enables a three-dimensional effect, so that
    viewers perceive that an image has depth as well as height and width, similarly to objects
    in the real world. The technology behind the 3-D effect is called stereoscopy or
    stereoscopic imaging.

  • Agricultural Loader

  • Angle Bar

  • Articulated Bus

  • Back Hoe

  • Billet

    Semi-finished casting products are intermediate castings produced in a steel mill that need further processing before being finished goods. They are used
    for rolling into bars, rods, and sections. It can be produced with ingots or
    directly by continuous casting. Billets are used as raw materials or
    feedstock in extrusion, forging, rolling, and other metal-processing
    operation. Billet metal is a solid length of material that has been extruded
    into shape is often used in CNC machining.

  • Blooms

    Blooms are intermediate-stage pieces of steel produced by a first pass of rolling
    (in a blooming mill) that works the ingots down to a smaller cross-sectional area,
    but still greater than 36 in2 (230 cm2). Blooms are used as rolling material in the manufacturing process of rails, seamless pipes, etc. Billet. The billet is also a
    casting product. In a new era of industry, generally, the billets are made with the help of a machine called CCM (continuous casting machine).

  • Boom Truck

  • Chemicals

  • Chrome Ore

    Chromium is a metal used to induce hardness, toughness, and chemical resistance in steel.
    The alloy produced is known as “stainless steel.” When alloyed with iron and nickel,
    it produces an alloy known as “nichrome” which is resistant to high temperatures and used
    to make heating units, ovens, and other appliances. Thin coatings of chromium alloys are
    used as platings on auto parts, appliances, and other products. These are given the name
    “chrome plated.” It is also used to make superalloys that can perform well in the hot,
    corrosive, and high-stress environment of jet engines.

  • Coal

    Coal is a family name for a variety of solid organic fuels and refers to a range of combustible sedimentary rock materials spanning a continuous quality range. For convenience, this continuous series is divided into four categories: 1) anthracite, 2) bituminous coal (metallurgical coal), 3) sub-bituminous coal, 4) lignite.

    Coal is the primary fuel used by integrated iron and steel producers.

  • Coated Sheet

  • Coated Steel Coil

    When the steel surface is coated with an additional layer of organic or metallic materials
    to protect from rusting, is called coated steel. Coil coating is the method by which a metal
    coil is coated in a continuous process prior to fabrication. The metal coil is brought
    through an uncoiler, a line-loading accumulator, processed and painted according to
    requirements brought through a finish line exit accumulator, and then rewound on a
    recoiler. Coil coating is the continuous and highly automated industrial process for efficiently coating coils of metal. Because the metal is treated before it is cut and formed, the entire surface is cleaned and treated, providing tightly bonded finishes.

  • Coke

    A solid carbon based product derived from baking bituminous coal at high temperature to remove volatile constituents.

    Metallurgical coke (‘met coke’) is used as the main fuel in the smelting of iron ore in a blast furnace. The quality of coke has a significant influence on furnace productivity and iron production costs.

  • Cold Rolled Coil

    Hot-rolled coil is produced from semi-finished products , which are reduced to certain
    thicknesses by rolling and annealing and wound into a roll. Hot-rolled steel is used
    e.g. for the manufacture of pipes, steel doors and tanks or is further processed into
    cold-rolled steel.Hot rolled steel is malleable at high temperatures, enabling it to
    be rolled into a variety of shapes. Hot rolled steel sheet and coil is a basic carbon steel
    product commonly used for applications in which dimensional tolerances and surface finish
    quality is not critical.

  • Cold Rolled sheet

    Railroad tracks and construction projects often use hot rolled steel. Hot rolled steel can
    often be identified by the following characteristics: A scaled surface—a remnant of cooling
    from extreme temperatures. Slightly rounded edges and corners for bar and plate products
    (due to shrinkage and less precise finishing.Cold-rolled steel refers to low-carbon steel
    produced by a “cold rolling” method and processed at near normal room temperatures.
    Cold-rolled steel sheets are commonly used for engineered products where tight tolerances,
    concentricity, straightness and coated surfaces are required.