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High-Strength Steel vs. Aluminum in Robot Part Forming

Published by E-BI on Apr 27, 2026

robot part forming

Industrial, collaborative, mobile, and autonomous robots require structural and load-bearing components that balance strength, weight, fatigue life, cost, and manufacturability. High-strength steel and aluminum are the two dominant materials used in metal forming processes (stamping, forging, extrusion, roll-forming, bending). Choosing between them significantly impacts robot payload capacity, battery life, durability, and total cost. This article provides a head-to-head comparison and explains when each material is better for robot part forming, with insights from E-BI’s multi-process manufacturing in China, Vietnam, and Thailand.

High-Strength Steel vs. Aluminum: Head-to-Head Comparison

Criterion High-Strength Steel (HSLA, 980 MPa+, 4130, 4340) Aluminum (6061-T6, 5052-H32, 7075-T6)
Strength (Yield/Tensile) Superior (600–1,200 MPa yield) Good (200–500 MPa yield)
Weight Heavier (~7.8 g/cm³) ~1/3 the density (~2.7 g/cm³)
Strength-to-Weight Ratio Very good in optimized designs Excellent (lighter for same stiffness in many cases)
Fatigue Resistance Excellent (especially after shot peening) Good (but lower endurance limit than steel)
Impact Toughness Superior (high energy absorption) Good (but can be brittle at low temperatures)
Corrosion Resistance Poor unless coated/galvanized Excellent (natural oxide layer)
Formability Moderate (requires annealing or warm forming for complex shapes) Excellent (easy to stamp, bend, extrude)
Machinability Moderate to difficult Excellent
Cost per kg Lower Higher
Cost per Part (High Volume) Usually lower after tooling amortization Higher material cost but faster cycle time
EMI/RFI Shielding Excellent Good (but requires thicker walls or conductive coating)
Thermal Conductivity Moderate (~50 W/m·K) High (~170–230 W/m·K)

When High-Strength Steel Is Better for Robot Parts

High-strength steel is usually the superior choice when:

  • Heavy payloads or high torque (industrial 6-axis arms, pallet-handling robots)
  • High fatigue life is critical (millions of cycles under shock load)
  • Impact resistance is required (construction, mining, demolition bots)
  • Cost is the top priority in high-volume production
  • EMI shielding is needed near motors/inverters
  • Long unsupported spans or thin sections under compression

When Aluminum Is Better for Robot Parts

Aluminum is usually the better choice when:

  • Weight is critical (battery-powered AMRs, cobots, delivery bots)
  • Corrosion resistance is needed (outdoor, humid, or washdown environments)
  • Complex extrusion or deep-drawn shapes are required
  • Thermal conductivity matters (battery trays, motor housings)
  • Rapid prototyping or low-to-medium volume production
  • Non-magnetic properties are needed (near magnetic sensors)

E-BI’s Dual Expertise in Steel & Aluminum Forming for Robotics

E-BI offers both materials and multiple forming processes under one roof, allowing customers to choose the optimal material/process combination.

High-Strength Steel Forming

Progressive stamping, cold/hot forging, roll-forming, and CNC bending in HSLA, 4130, 4340, and stainless grades with galvanizing/powder coating for corrosion protection.

Aluminum Forming

Extrusion (custom T-slot & hollow profiles), stamping, deep drawing, and CNC bending in 5052, 6061, 6063, 7075 alloys with anodizing or chem film.

Hybrid Assemblies

Many robots use both: steel for high-load joints & hubs, aluminum for frames & covers. E-BI manufactures hybrid assemblies with precise mating interfaces.

Conclusion: Choose Based on Application Requirements

There is no universal winner—high-strength steel excels in heavy-duty, high-fatigue, cost-sensitive applications, while aluminum wins in lightweight, corrosion-resistant, thermally conductive, or rapid-prototype scenarios. Many advanced robots use a hybrid approach.

E-BI’s dual expertise in high-strength steel and aluminum forming—combined with full machining, finishing, and assembly—lets you select the best material and process for each robot component. Connect with E-BI today to choose the optimal material for your next-generation robots.


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