CHAPTER 5
THE HOT ROLLING PROCESS 
5.1 INTRODUCTION:  
The primary function of the Hot Strip Mill is to reheat semi-finished steel slabs 
of  steel  nearly  to  their  melting  point,  then  roll  them  thinner  and  longer  through  12 
successive rolling  mill stands driven by  motors totaling  77,000  hp,  and finally coiling 
up the lengthened steel sheet for transport to the next process. 
The Hot Mill rolls slabs weighing up to 30 tons between 30 and 74. Steel slab 
8 to 9 inches thick and up to 36 feet long is rolled into strip as thin as 1/16 inches and 
up to a half-mile in length.  
Coils are produced with a 30 inside diameter (eye) on one of two coilers, with 
outside diameter limitations of 72 and 74, corresponding to 850 and 1000 pounds  -
per-inch-width (PIW), respectively.  
The  mill  supplies  coil  for  each  of  CSIs  remaining  operations,  as  well  as  a 
finished product for shipment directly to CSIs customers. 
Most material is transported out of the mill area by an automated coil handling 
system, though some skelp for the Pipe Mill is staged toward the east end of the mill 
bay until it is cool enough to load onto rail cars.  
5.2 REHEATING:  
Critical to the Hot Strip Mill is its walking-beam reheat furnace, state-of-the art 
equipment  that  replaced  and  now  outperforms  three  older-  (pusher-)  style  furnaces. 
Nominally  rated  to  produce  270  tons-per  -hour, 
improvements in  efficiency  and some sacrifice in 
slab  temperature  uniformity  enable  extended 
production rates 25% above design. Heating this 
much steel from room temperature to 2200-2400 
degrees Fahrenheit consumes  around  10  million 
cubic feet of natural gas each day.   
As slabs are assigned to orders, schedules are written and material is staged 
with  rail-cars  and  overhead  cranes  in  the  slab  yard  at  the  west  end  of  the  Hot  Strip 
Mill. Slabs are placed, one at a time, on a roll line. The slabs dimensions and weight 
are confirmed  as  it  is  positioned  in front  of  the charge door  on  the south side  of  the 
furnace.  When  space  is  available  in  the  furnace,  large  electro-mechanical  pusher 
arms engage to move the slabs into the furnace. 
Once inside, the slabs are supported about eight feet off of the furnace floor by 
water-cooled, refractory-coated pipes called skids. To minimize the cold spots (skid 
marks) left in the slab, the skid spacing changes approximately two-thirds of the way 
through the furnace. Two independent sets of skids, one fixed, one walking, take turns 
supporting  the  slab  as  it  is  walked  through  the  furnace  by  a  massive  sub-frame 
energized by a pair of large hydraulic cylinders. 
The interior of the furnace is 389 
wide, fifteen feet from floor to ceiling, and 
142 long.  
It  is  divided  into  eight  zones  for 
temperature  control:  preheat,  top-and-
bottom;  heating,  top-and-bottom;  and 
soak, top-and-bottom, east-and-west. 
  The  preheat  and  heating  zones  combust  a  mixture  of  natural  gas  and 
preheated combustion air with massive burners on the side walls of the furnace, both 
above and below the skids, to heat the slab nearly to its discharge temperature.  
Much  of  the  preheating  of  the  steel  is  achieved  by  the  hot  exhaust  gases 
rushing past the slabs on the way to the recuperators above the charge door.  
Whatever heat  is left in the  exhaust  gases  preheats the incoming combustion 
air to over 1000 F in these massive heat-exchangers.  
Conversely, in the heating zone the steel is primarily heated by the glowing-hot 
furnace walls.  
In  the  soak  zone,  numerous  smaller  burners  seek  to  maintain  a  uniform 
temperature within the zones to equilibrate any cold spots in the slabs.  
Refractory dividers help to physically distinguish the zones, and thermocouple 
temperature sensors throughout the furnace interact with the automatic burner control 
systems to maintain the target temperatures in each zone. 
Complex  computer  models  calculate 
the targeted roughing mill exit temperature to 
obtain  a  furnace  discharge  (drop-out)  aim 
temperature. 
 Estimating  the  temperature  profile 
through  the  thickness  of  each  slab  in  the 
furnace  on  an  ongoing  basis,  the  computer 
aids  the  operator  in  selecting  the  production  rate  and  zone  set-points  that  will 
maximize  production  of  steel  slabs  uniformly  heated  to  as  close  to  the  target 
temperature as possible.  
After  the  rolling  process  begins,  as  the  steel  exits  the  roughing  mill,  its 
temperature is fed back to the furnace, updating the computer models  and informing 
the Heater as to the temperature uniformity. 
When the slab reaches the discharge door at the exit end of the furnace, and 
the  computer  has  determined  that  the  slab  has  been  sufficiently  heated,  the  door 
opens  and  massive  extractor  arms  reach  beneath  the  slab,  lift  it  off  of  the  skid 
supports, and draw it out of the furnace. 
 The east and west extractors can act independently of one another to remove 
double-charged  slabs  one-at-a-time,  or  in  conjunction  to  extract  longer  slabs.  The 
intensely hot slab is placed on a roller table which carries it into the roughing mill.  
5.3 DESCALING: 
After  exiting the reheat furnace,  the slab  passes  through  a  descaling  unit,  an 
enclosure employing two pairs of spray headers that blast the intensely hot slab with 
1,500  psi  pressurized  water  to  remove  the  1/8-inch  thick  layer  of  oxidized  iron  that 
forms at the surface of the slab in the oxygen-rich atmosphere of the reheat furnace. 
 Shortly after descaling, a (relatively) small 2-hi rolling mill called a scalebreaker 
reduces  the  slabs  thickness  by  about  one  inch  to  break  up  any  scale  that  remains. 
Just before the next reduction pass is taken, sweep sprays clean away any loosened 
scale that remains on the slab surfaces.  
The transfer bar will be descaled twice more during roughing, immediately prior 
to the third and to the last rolling operation, to remove the scale that has grown back 
over the three minutes or so that it spends in the roughing mill. 
5.4 ROUGHING: 
The  roughing  mill  is  made  up  of  six 
independent rolling  mill stands,  the last four 
of  which  incorporate  small  vertical  rolling 
mills called edgers.  
Slabs heated in the furnace until they 
glow bright orange-yellow are rolled through 
one  stand  at  a  time  to  produce  so-called 
transfer bars suitable for finish rolling.  
High-pressure  water-jet  nozzles  clean  the  oxidized  iron,  or  scale,  from  the 
surface along the way. 
As the transfer bar exits the last roughing mill stand, the thickness of the leading 
edge of the bar is estimated. Similarly, a pyrometer measures the temperature profile 
of the bar from head to tail and a special camera photographs both ends.   
Depending  on  the  gauge,  width,  and  grade  of  the  product  to  be  rolled,  the 
average temperature of the bar as it exits the last roughing mill normally ranges from 
1900 to 2100 Fahrenheit.  
This  data  is  collected  in  anticipation  of  finish  rolling.  Computers  immediately 
begin calculating the speeds and gaps for threading the six finishing mills, which will 
roll the steel in tandem with one another. 
The  workhorse roughing mill has  135  wide rolls for rolling broadside (as the 
first roughing mill is commonly called) to make a slab wider.  
A 5,000 hp motor drives 42-diameter work-rolls through 28:1 gears to reduce 
the slabs thickness by as much as 2-. 
The  last four roughing mills  each incorporate  edgers for  width control  and roll 
the bar from five to six inches thick incrementally down to around an inch and a quarter, 
depending on the customers ordered width, gauge, and steel grade.  
As  mentioned  previously,  the  third  and  fifth  roughing  mills  each  have  high-
pressure descaling headers operating at 1,500 psi. 
 The  individual  roughing  mills  are  spaced  increasingly  further  apart  to 
accommodate  the  lengthening  of  the  transfer  bars  as  they  are  rolled  thinner  and 
thinner.  
5.5 EDGING: 
At the very high temperatures at which the steel is rolled in the roughing mill, it 
is very plastic and flows easily like cookie dough beneath a rolling pin. Consequently, 
as the slab is reduced from eight to nine inches thick to the final bar thickness of one 
to  one  and  one-half  inches,  bars  tend  to  spread  width  wise  by  a  few  inches  at  their 
extremities, and by as much as an inch through the body.  
The  edgers  serve  to  hold  a  uniform  width  through  the  bars  length,  and  are 
powerful  enough  to  squeeze  the  bar  as  much  as  an  inch  narrower  than  the  slabs 
original dimension.  
5.6 DESCALING: 
Between the Crop Shear and the first Finishing 
Mill  stand  sits  the  #2  ScaleBreaker,  which  is  tasked 
with  the  final  scale  removal  operation.  Sprays  above 
and  below the transfer  bar  blast  it  with  1,500  psi  jets 
of water to break up the scale that has re-formed since 
the descaling operation at the entry cool off, becomes 
increasingly sticky even as it returns ever more slowly to the surfaces of the still red-
hot steel. 
 Finally, a pair of high-pressure headers operating at nearly 3,000 psi makes a 
final pass at both surfaces of the transfer bar shortly before it enters F6 for finish rolling.   
As  with  the  roughing  mills  descaling  system,  for  some  thinner-gauge,  wider, 
and/or stiffer products, the low-pressure header is disabled to conserve heat for rolling. 
In part because further descaling is not particularly practical once finish rolling 
begins,  the  #2  Scale  Breaker  is  the  last  opportunity  to  remove  oxidation  before  the 
finished hot-rolled strip is coiled.  
Typically, the descaling system in the Hot Strip Mill is very effective at removing 
primary  (from the furnace)  and secondary (regrown  during roughing rolling) scale  of  
the last roughing mill, as well as any scale that has persisted through earlier descaling 
operations.  
After  descaling  by  the  low  -pressure  headers,  the  bar  is  pinched  by  a  pair  of 
pneumatically-actuated  rolls  to  mechanically  loosen  any  remaining  scale,  which,  as 
the processing temperatures. 
5.7 CROPPING: 
Because a square head-end is critical to properly threading the finish mills and 
the downcoilers,  and  because  an  uneven tail can bruise  work-roll surfaces  or cause 
threading problems for the next production process, the head- and tail-ends of nearly 
every transfer bar are cropped by a pair of large steel drums each with a shear-blade 
extending along its length. With the bar crawling along the roller table at around 100 
fpm,  sensors  detect  its  position  and  speed  in  order  to  time  the  crop  shear  drums  to 
optimize the  amount cropped; since  transfer bars  are  over  an  inch thick,  each  extra 
inch of crop-length scraps another 15-30 lbs.  
5.8 FINISHING: 
CSIs  Hot  Strip  Mill  includes  six  finishing  mills,  which  reduce  the  thickness  of 
the transfer bar down to the gauge required by the customer or the next process. The 
rolling speed is set to allow the last stand to perform the final reduction at the finishing 
temperature,  between  1500  to  1650F,  specified  to  reach  certain  mechanical 
properties. 
By  now,  the  steel  has  been 
rolled into a flat bar as long as 200 feet. 
In  contrast  to  the  roughing  mills,  the 
finishing  mills  roll  the  transfer  bar  in 
tandem,  meaning  each  bar  will  be 
rolled  through  all  six  stands  at  once. 
The  hot  steel  is  quite  fragile  as  it  is 
rolled  and  tension  between  the 
finishing  mill  stands  must  be  closely 
controlled at very low levels in order to avoid stretching or tearing the strip. 
Prior to the finish rolling  operation, the  head-  and  tail-ends  of the transfer  bar 
will be sheared to square them up, helping to ensure proper threading and tail-out. A 
final two-stage descaling operation is performed to clean off the scale that has grown 
on the bar during roughing. 
Once the bar is threaded between each successive pair of mills, a free-turning 
roll on an electro-mechanical pivot called a looper roll engages the bottom of the strip 
to  monitor  the  tension  between  the  stands.  Adjustments  are  made  as  necessary  to 
ensure  the  strip  threads  properly  through  each  of  the  mills  without  looping  up  and 
folding over or stretching and tearing apart. The position of each roll is fed back to the 
finishing mills sophisticated automation system which, along with information from the 
load  cells  that  monitor  rolling  force  and  from  the  X-ray  gauge  measuring  final  strip 
thickness, work to smoothly adjust the roll gaps and speeds to maintain stable rolling 
of  strip  to  the  necessary  thickness  in  spite  of  the  temperature  variations  present  in 
every bar.  
5.9 TEMPERATURE CONTROL: 
A  profound  metallurgical  transformation  in 
the  crystal  structure  takes  place  as  the  material 
cools, which, depending on the specific chemistry of 
the material, typically is between 1450 and 1600F. 
Additionally,  the  mechanical  properties  of  the  final 
product  respond  to  some  degree  to  the  specific 
temperature  at  which  the  final  reducing  pass  is 
taken. 
Consequently,  a  finishing  temperature  for  each  product  is  specified  and  mill 
automation  will  adjust  the  speed  of  the  first  finishing  mill  stand  based  on  its 
temperature  and the  extent to  which the bar  is  expected  to cool  as it makes  its  way 
through each stand, in order to allow the strip exiting the finishing stands to meet the 
target temperature. 
Since each transfer bar spends approximately one minute in the finish mill, from 
head  to  tail,  the  temperature  of  the  steel  going  into  the  finishing  stands  will  be 
significantly  lower,  perhaps  200F,  by  the  time  the  tail-end  is  rolled  as  compared  to 
the  head-end.  Consequently,  once  the  first  500  feet  of  strip  has  been  rolled  at  the 
thread speed and a downcoiler has been threaded, the mill begins to accelerate at a 
zoom rate that had been calculated from the temperature profile of the bar as it exited 
the last roughing mill. Top speeds as high as 2,700 fpm (30 mph) are reached by the 
mill automation seeking to maintain the specified finishing temperature throughout the 
final  product.  A  pyrometer  placed  after  the  last  stand  updates  the  finishing  mills 
computer  models  and  allows  for  the  addition  of  this  temperature  to  strip  quality 
records. 
5.10 GAUGE CONTROL: 
With the tremendous rolling forces present in a rolling mill, it is not sufficient to 
simply set the gap between the work rolls to the thickness desired and expect the strip 
to  come  out  the  other  side  at  that  thickness.  With  rolling  forces  regularly  exceeding 
3,000 tons in the early finishing stands, the mill housings can be expected to stretch 
as  much  as  one  half inch  after the  bar  enters the  bite  when rolling  wide, stiff, and/or 
light-gauge products.  
When  setting  the  roll  gaps  for  threading,  it  is  critical  that  this  factor  be 
compensated for in  each  of the  mill stands; to do so, sophisticated  models  are  used 
by  mill  automation  to  estimate  the  rolling  force  for  each  transfer  bar  in  each  stand 
based  on,  among  other  things,  the  incoming  and  outgoing  thickness,  width,  steel 
grade, and estimated instantaneous temperature. 
The  models  employed  by  the  mill  automation  are  updated  with  the  rolling 
parameters  and  product  measurements  each  time  a  new  slab  is  rolled,  continually 
optimized the mills automation set -ups. Product quality and production yield benefit 
from scheduling products with similar gauge and grade to roll in succession, allowing 
automation to deploy the most recently utilized rolling model.  
5.11 FLATNESS AND CROWN: 
In  addition  to  the  degree  to  which  mill  stands  stretch  under  rolling  loads,  as 
described  previously,  the  rolls  will  deflect,  or  bend,  under  load  since  they  are  being 
forced apart in the middle by the strip but are supported at the ends  by the bearings. 
This deflection is the source of the strip attribute commonly referred to as crown. Strip 
crown is initiated in the roughing mills and continues through each successive rolling 
mill stand. Strip crown is measured at the exit end of the finishing mills by a second, 
scanning X-ray gauge which traverses back-and-forth across the width of the strip as 
the steel is rolled. The thickness it measures is compared to the thickness measured 
by  the primary  X-ray  monitoring the center-line  gauge through the  length  of the strip 
and the difference is then plotted as a product quality record. Typically, the Hot Strip 
Mill  produces  material  with  between  0.001  and  0.003  of  crown  depending  on  a 
number of factors that include the gauge, width and grade of the finished product. 
Operators of any rolling mill have a degree of control over the shape of the roll 
gap by adjusting the screw-downs to increase or decrease the roll force present in that 
stand,  influencing  the  degree  to  which  the  rolls  deflect.  The  last  four  finishing  mill 
stands, like most modern rolling mills, incorporate hydraulic work-roll bending to give 
the  operators  additional control  over  the shape  of  the  loaded roll  gap. In contrast  to 
the  other rolling  mills  at CSI,  all  of  which roll steel  at  or near room  temperature,  the 
plasticity  of  red-hot  steel  allows  the  Hot  Strip  Mill,  by  forcing  material  to  flow  width-
wise, to alter the profile in the strip without introducing shape defects.  
Operators will  adjust  work-roll  bending in  these stands to  influence the crown 
in the final product. The work-roll bending in the final finishing stand is used exclusively 
to create a roll gap shape that matches the profile of the strip exiting the prior finishing 
mill to produce a flat, final product. 
After  exiting the finishing mills, the strip is carried down  a succession  of more 
than  260  individually-driven  rolls  through  four  banks  of  low-pressure,  high-volume 
water  sprays  that  cool  the  red-hot  strip  to  a  specified  coiling  temperature  between 
1000F and 1250F and into one of two downcoilers.  
Side guides on either side of the run out table seek to keep the strips head-end 
pointed at the coilers; the final section of guides in front of each coiler adjusts to match 
strip  width  and  features  a  pneumatic  quick-close  system  that  allows  the  operator  to 
center the strip head-end as coiling begins.  
5.12 LAMINAR COOLING: 
Metallurgically  critical  to  the  properties  of 
hot-rolled steel is the coiling temperature, as the coil 
will cool from  this temperature to  ambient  over the 
course  of  three  days.  Essentially  a  heat  treatment 
comparable to  annealing, the stresses  imparted  to 
the  steel  during  reduction  from  nine  inches  thick 
down to ordered gauge are given the opportunity as 
the coil cools to relieve themselves.  
Though  the  steel  is  continually  recrystallizing  during  hot-rolling,  reductions  in 
thickness sometimes in excess of 99% and taking place in less than ten minutes stress 
the  steel  considerably;  coiling  temperature  is  specified  by  product  metallurgists  to 
harness  and  manipulate  those  stress  levels  in  search  of  optimal  mechanical 
properties. 
Product sold as hot rolled and hot rolled pickled and oiled to be laser cut by a 
customer is coiled at relatively high temperatures to try to relax the steel as much as 
possible  so  that  parts  cut  from  the  coil  will  lie  flat  even  after  residual  stresses  have 
resolved themselves around the parts configuration. Conversely, coiling at a relatively 
cool temperature  allows physical quality  steel  grades to retain  higher internal stress 
levels and limits the size of the individual crystals and of the carbides that form within 
and between the crystals;  each  of these factors contributes  to  higher strength levels 
in the finished hot-rolled strip. 
Cooling  steel  400F  as  it  rushes  past  at  speeds  up  to  2700  fpm  requires 
tremendous amounts of water, so a total of 152 spray headers, individually valved and 
controlled  by  the  automation  system,  drench  the  steel  from  the  top  and  bottom  with 
curtains of water. The computer estimates, based on the thread speed of the strip and 
target  finishing  temperature,  how  much  water  will  be  needed  to  cool  the  head-end, 
and  the  accuracy  of  this  estimate  is  confirmed  by  a  pyrometer  in  front  of  the 
downcoilers.  As  adjustment  to the number  of sprays in use is needed, the computer 
will turn sprays on and off to meet the targeted temperature through the length of the 
coil.  Since  the  finishing  mills  will  accelerate  once  the  downcoiler  is  threaded  to 
continue to make finishing temperature, increasingly more sprays are activated as the 
steel  is  rolled  in  order  to  compensate  for  the  reduced  time  it  spends  on  the  run-out 
table. 
Up to 75,000 gallons of water are pumped each minute throughout the Hot Strip 
Mill to cool finish-rolled strip, furnace skids,  mill rolls,  and coiler components,  and to 
descale transfer bars. All water is recycled through a system of scale/sludge collection 
pits, through the laminar cooling system, and back to one of the two dedicated cooling 
towers.  
5.13 COILING 
CSIs Hot Strip Mills present configuration relies 
on two Coilers. Minor differences exist between the two, 
but both operable coilers begin with a pair of pinch rolls 
that  catch  the  strip  head-end  and  establish  tension 
across the run-out table and back to the finishing mills. 
The  head-end  is  deflected  by  a  gate  down  to  the  30 
mandrel associated with the coiler and is guided around the mandrel by pneumatically-
actuated wrapper rolls linked by aprons. 
Once the head-end is all the way around the mandrel, laps begin to build around 
the  mandrel,  forcing  away  the  wrapper  rolls.  Once  the  head-end  is  cinched  and 
friction and tension prevent the wraps of steel from slipping relative to the mandrel, the 
wrapper rolls  disengage from the growing coil  of steel.  After  the strip tails  out  of the 
finishing  mill,  the  pinch  rolls  continue  to  hold  back-tension  to  prevent  the  coil  from 
unraveling; before the strip tail is pulled through the pinch rolls, the wrapper rolls are 
reengaged. A hydraulic coil car moves into place beneath the coil, and, after rising up 
to support the coils bulk, strips the coil from the mandrel and places it in position for 
transport to the tagging and automatic bander procedures.  
5.14 COIL HANDLING: 
Coils  are  removed  from  each  coiler  by  hydraulic  coil 
cars  that  set  the  product  down  on  the  platform  in  the   hole 
where one of the two walking beams cycle back and forth to 
move coils into position  to receive  identification  and banding. 
Since the product is still too hot to apply the paper tickets that 
identify coils throughout the rest of the plant, a pair of taggers 
employ  lasers  to  burn  identifying  information  onto  stainless 
steel tags  affectionately referred to  as  license  plates. These 
are spot welded to the outside wrap of steel before the band is 
applied. Slabs that previously were identified by Heat and Cut 
numbers  from  the  suppliers  caster  are  re-identified  as  a 
specific roll item with a six-digit alpha-numeric code. 
A  second  coil  car  takes  the  coil  from  the  bander  to  a 
rotator  outside  of the  mill  building  which slowly spins the coil 
90 so yet another coil car can take the coil east to the lift-and-
carry. Two more (high-speed) coil cars and another lift-and-carry complete the coils 
journey either to the conveyor that will take it into Hot Strip Finishing or to the Cooling 
Pond. In all, the automated system employs ten distinct electro-hydraulic devices each 
depending  on  multiple sensors to  transport  90%  of the Hot Strip  Mills production to 
the building where the next operation will be performed.