TL;DR: Matching metal tin or aluminium case specification to your product’s actual fill weight, fill chemistry, and retail environment prevents the most common failure modes before tooling is ever cut.
TL;DR: Wall thickness differences as small as 0.05mm between tinplate gauges translate directly to a 15–20% change in panel stiffness — a gap that’s invisible on a drawing but obvious when a consumer picks up the box.
What the Symptom Tells You — and What It Usually Masks #
Three failure patterns come up repeatedly when brands bring us a metal packaging brief that’s already gone sideways with another supplier.
The first is lid fit variation: the lid either jams under 10% relative humidity change or rattles loose at the same humidity. This gets blamed on press tooling, but in most cases it traces back to nominal wall thickness being specified without a tolerance band — and the supplier defaulting to ±0.05mm where the application needed ±0.02mm.
The second is coating adhesion failure on the interior lacquer. It shows up as blistering or flaking within 90 days of filling, usually on food tins or cosmetic tins with oil-based contents. Brands typically flag this as a print quality issue. The mechanism is almost always thermal: the lacquer cure schedule didn’t reach 190–210°C internal metal temperature long enough to cross-link fully, or the substrate surface energy was below 36 mN/m at the time of coating application.
The third is edge corrosion on tinplate tins, appearing at the seam or cut edge within 6–12 months of retail display. This one is easy to misread as a storage or shipping problem. The root cause is nearly always insufficient ETP (electrolytic tinplate) coating weight — specified at 2.8 g/m² when the product environment warranted 5.6 g/m² or higher per ASTM A623.
| Symptom | Common Misdiagnosis | Actual Root Cause |
|---|---|---|
| Lid fit variation > 0.3mm | Press tooling drift | Wall thickness tolerance not specified (±0.05mm vs ±0.02mm needed) |
| Interior lacquer blistering | Print/coating quality | Cure temp below 190°C or substrate surface energy < 36 mN/m |
| Edge corrosion at seam | Shipping / humidity damage | ETP coating weight under-specified (2.8 vs 5.6 g/m²) |
| Panel dent under light hand pressure | Thin gauge material | Gauge selected on cost, not minimum stiffness calculation |
| Label or litho print ghosting | Ink formulation issue | Metal surface not degreased to < 5 mg/m² residual oil |
The Non-Obvious Root Cause: Gauge Specification Without Stiffness Target #
The failure mode that gets misdiagnosed most often is panel denting — where a finished tin dents visibly under normal handling pressure that would never damage a paper-based pack. Brands report this as a materials quality problem and request a heavier gauge. Sometimes that’s the right answer. Often it isn’t.
Panel stiffness in a metal tin is a function of three variables together: base metal gauge, temper grade, and panel geometry (unsupported span). Specifying gauge alone — “0.23mm tinplate” — without locking in the temper grade and the maximum unsupported panel dimension leaves at least two of those three variables open. A 0.23mm T2-temper tinplate panel spanning 80mm unsupported will deflect approximately 0.8mm under a 10N load. The same 0.23mm material at T4 temper spanning the same 80mm deflects roughly 0.5mm under the same load. That’s a 37% stiffness difference from temper selection alone, with no change in material cost.
Temper grades in tinplate run from T1 (softest, highest formability) through T5 (hardest, lowest formability), per ASTM A623. T2 and T3 are the workhorse grades for standard tins. T4 and T5 are used where panel rigidity is the primary requirement — instrument cases, collectible tins, high-end confectionery. The issue is that buyers rarely specify temper in the initial brief. They specify gauge. When the supplier’s procurement team sources the most cost-available coil stock, they may pick T2 when T3 was needed.
Confirmation measurement is straightforward: a simple panel deflection test using a calibrated force gauge at the centre of the largest unsupported face. We log these measurements under our QC-F14 rigid panel assessment form at incoming inspection. Any sample showing > 0.6mm deflection under 10N on a panel span under 100mm gets flagged for temper re-confirmation before the production run proceeds. Without that gate, you can pass all the dimensional checks on a tin and still ship a product that feels flimsy in the consumer’s hand.
For aluminium cases, the equivalent misdiagnosis is blaming anodise layer thickness when the problem is actually alloy selection. A 6061-T6 aluminium wall at 1.2mm and a 5052-H32 wall at 1.2mm look identical on a drawing. The 6061-T6 panel is approximately 40% stiffer under bending load. Anodising to 25 microns (per ISO 7599) adds surface hardness and corrosion resistance but does not meaningfully change panel stiffness. Specifying anodise thickness when the structural requirement should be driving alloy grade is a common brief error.
Corrective Actions Ranked by Impact and Feasibility #
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Add temper grade to the material specification. Zero cost, immediate. Specify T3 minimum for panels with unsupported spans over 70mm, T4 for spans over 100mm. This single addition to the PO eliminates the most common source of stiffness variation.
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Define lid-to-body clearance as a bilateral tolerance, not a nominal. Instead of “lid inner diameter 100mm”, specify “lid inner diameter 100.0 +0.1 / -0.0mm, body outer diameter 99.6 +0.0 / -0.1mm.” This makes the 0.3–0.5mm working clearance an explicit engineering requirement, not an assumption.
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Specify minimum ETP coating weight for the product environment. For dry goods and non-food applications, 2.8 g/m² differential coating (heavier coat inside) is acceptable. For food contact, oil-based cosmetics, or high-humidity retail environments, specify 5.6 g/m² equal coating or 8.4 g/m² differential, referencing ASTM A623 Table 1. This affects material cost but the delta is small relative to the cost of a corrosion-related recall.
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Add cure schedule verification to the first-article inspection. Request the lacquer supplier’s cross-link verification test data (typically MEK double-rub test, minimum 100 double rubs without coating removal) alongside the first sample. Lacquer cure is invisible on a finished tin but determines whether the coating survives contact with the product for 12–24 months.
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Qualify the surface degreasing step in the pre-treatment spec. Residual oil above 5 mg/m² on the metal surface causes adhesion failures in both lithographic printing and interior lacquer application. This is verifiable by water-break test on sample panels. It’s an inexpensive check that eliminates a significant proportion of adhesion-related rework.
Prevention — What to Put in the Brief Before Tooling Starts #
The specifications that prevent the failures above belong in the initial RFQ brief, not the first-sample feedback note. For metal tins: state the product fill weight, fill chemistry (aqueous, oil-based, dry), retail humidity range, and expected consumer handling load. For aluminium cases: state the alloy grade, temper, minimum wall thickness, and surface treatment system — not just the cosmetic finish colour.
Tooling for metal tins typically runs 45–60 working days from approved drawing. Changes after tooling cuts are expensive in both time and cost. The document to request from your supplier at brief stage is their Material Selection and Tolerance Standard — if they don’t have one in writing, that’s a qualification risk worth noting.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a metal tin or aluminium case project, the three things that determine quote accuracy most are: fill product chemistry, the largest unsupported panel dimension, and target retail shelf life. Without those, we’re estimating gauge and coating weight rather than calculating them.
The gap we see most often in incoming briefs is the absence of a lid fit tolerance. Brands specify the lid outer diameter and assume we’ll manage the clearance. We do — but our default working clearance is 0.3mm, which is appropriate for most ambient retail environments. If your product ships to high-humidity markets (Southeast Asia, coastal Australia) or is subject to temperature cycling (outdoor display, cold chain), that clearance needs to be 0.4–0.5mm or the lid will jam in field conditions.
Our standard sampling timeline for new metal tin tooling is 35–45 working days from approved 2D drawing. For aluminium cases with custom hinge or latch mechanisms, allow 50–60 working days. Both timelines assume first-pass drawing approval — a revision round after the initial drawing review adds 7–10 working days.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my tin lid fit perfectly in the sample but stick in production units?
The sample was almost certainly made under controlled workshop conditions and inspected within a narrow time window. Production tinplate coil has dimensional variation across the width, and if the coil tolerance wasn’t locked in the PO at ±0.02mm on gauge, the body diameter can vary enough across a 50,000-unit run to push lid clearance outside the functional range. Specify bilateral tolerances on both lid and body, not just nominal dimensions.
Can I switch from tinplate to aluminium on an existing tool to reduce weight?
Not on the same tool. Aluminium and tinplate have different spring-back coefficients during drawing and forming — typically 15–20% higher spring-back for aluminium alloys. A tool calibrated for 0.23mm tinplate will produce out-of-tolerance dimensions on aluminium. A new tool or a dedicated tool adjustment is required.
What’s the minimum order quantity for a custom metal tin with litho printing?
For standard round or rectangular tins with full-panel offset litho printing, our MOQ is 5,000 units per SKU. Below that, the setup amortisation on a 4-colour litho run makes per-unit cost unworkable. For plain or single-colour tins with label application instead of direct print, MOQ drops to 2,000 units.
Does the interior lacquer need to be food-grade even if the product isn’t food?
It depends on the product category and destination market. For cosmetics sold in the EU, the interior coating must comply with EU 10/2011 (or its metal-packaging equivalent framework) if there’s any chance of product-to-surface migration. For non-contact dry goods like candles, a standard epoxy-phenolic lacquer is sufficient. The question to ask is whether your product’s chemistry — fragrance oils, solvents, active cosmetic ingredients — could interact with an uncertified coating over 12–24 months. If uncertain, specify food-contact lacquer: the cost difference per unit is negligible.
Our current supplier says 0.23mm tinplate is standard — should we push for 0.25mm?
Not automatically. The right gauge depends on panel geometry and temper grade, not a round number preference. A 0.23mm T4-temper panel on a well-designed form can outperform a 0.25mm T2-temper panel on the same application. If your concern is denting or perceived quality, ask for the temper grade and the panel stiffness measurement at 10N load — those numbers tell you more than gauge alone.
Planning a packaging project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.