ASTM A480 Tolerances Explained with Examples and Calculations


ASTM A480 is the general requirements standard many mills follow for stainless plate, sheet and strip. Use this method to find tolerances fast and write a PO that avoids disputes.

Five tolerance families you’ll use

  • Thickness — cold‑rolled sheet is tighter than hot‑rolled plate.
  • Width — affects blank utilization and edge trimming.
  • Length — matters for cut‑to‑length blanks and plates.
  • Flatness — usually for cold‑rolled sheet; plate flatness handled separately.
  • Out‑of‑square/camber — critical for laser blanks and panels.

Method (repeatable)

  1. Identify form (sheet/plate/strip) and finish (2B/BA/No.4…)
  2. Find the thickness band then the width band
  3. Check flatness rules for your finish; note if “restricted flatness” is required

Worked example

Case: 304 2B sheet, 1.50 mm × 1219 × 2438. Go to the thickness table for cold‑rolled sheet at 1.50 mm, then the width band covering 1219 mm; then pick length/width tolerances for sheared blanks and the 2B flatness table. Record the set on your PO.

Tip: When tighter numbers are essential (e.g., laser blanks), ask for “restricted flatness” or a specific flatness per meter and confirm cost/lead time.

PO wording (copy/paste)

  • Stainless sheet ASTM A240/480, 304 2B, 1.50 × 1219 × 2438 mm
  • Tolerances per ASTM A480: thickness table (cold‑rolled sheet), width/length for sheared blanks
  • Flatness ≤ X mm/m (restricted flatness if required)
  • Edges: slit/mill/debur as stated

Baoli Engineering Team · Reviewed Oct 31, 2025