CRGO Material Utilization: How Smart Transformer Core Manufacturers Reduce Waste and Improve Cost Efficiency
- Mukesh Sekar

- Apr 10
- 3 min read

In CRGO procurement, most discussions revolve around price per kilogram. However, experienced transformer manufacturers understand that material utilization often has a greater impact on overall core cost than the purchase rate itself.
Two buyers may procure CRGO at similar prices, yet one achieves lower core cost simply because of better utilization. This difference becomes more visible when working with 0.23mm CRGO prime limb material, which is often available as surplus from project allocations and prime coil processing.
When dimensions align with transformer core requirements, 0.23mm prime limb laminations can reduce cutting waste, minimize processing time, and improve effective material usage.
1. The Hidden Cost in CRGO Coil Procurement
When purchasing CRGO coils, the usable material is always less than the total weight. Losses typically occur due to:
Edge trimming
Slitting wastage
Length mismatch
Notching scrap
Handling losses
These losses reduce the effective material used in transformer core assembly.
In contrast, 0.23mm CRGO prime limb material is already cut into usable limb laminations, reducing the need for extensive coil processing and improving material utilization.
2. Two Buyers, Same Price — Different Core Cost
Consider two procurement approaches:
Buyer A – CRGO Coil
Purchases 0.23mm CRGO coil
Performs slitting and cutting
Generates trimming scrap
Incurs processing time and labor
Buyer B – 0.23mm Prime Limb Material
Purchases 0.23mm prime limb laminations
Uses pre-cut sheets matching limb requirement
Reduces cutting operations
Minimizes scrap generation
Even if both buyers purchase material at a similar price per kg, Buyer B often achieves lower effective core cost due to better utilization and reduced processing loss.
This is why utilization-driven procurement is becoming increasingly relevant.
3. What Is 0.23mm CRGO Prime Limb Material
0.23mm CRGO prime limb material refers to:
Prime-grade grain-oriented electrical steel
Pre-cut limb laminations
Rust-free and oil-free sheets
Clear grain direction maintained
Ready for transformer core assembly
These laminations are commonly available as:
Jumbo limb material
Mitered laminations
Diamond cut laminations
V-notch and double V-notch sheets
Step-lap limb configurations
Since they are already processed, they reduce the need for coil cutting.
4. Why 0.23mm Is Most Common
Among CRGO thicknesses, 0.23mm prime limb material is the most commonly available in the market.
This is because:
0.23mm is widely used in energy-efficient transformer designs
Many projects utilize 0.23mm coils
Surplus limb laminations are generated during production
Coil processing of 0.23mm produces usable leftovers
0.27mm prime limb material is moderately available, depending on project circulation.Thicknesses such as 0.30mm and 0.35mm are relatively rare in prime limb surplus.
5. Improved Material Utilization
Using 0.23mm prime limb laminations helps:
Reduce trimming losses
Minimize scrap generation
Improve usable material percentage
Avoid narrow strip waste
Instead of cutting multiple strips from coils, manufacturers can directly use limb laminations.
This significantly improves effective material utilization.
6. Reduced Cutting and Processing Time
Since 0.23mm prime limb material is already cut:
No slitting required
Less notching setup
Reduced handling operations
Faster core assembly
This improves production turnaround, especially for medium-volume manufacturing.
7. Lower Effective Core Cost
Even when purchase price per kg is similar, 0.23mm prime limb material reduces:
Cutting waste
Processing labor
Machine time
Power consumption
This results in lower effective cost per finished transformer core, making it a smart procurement choice when dimensions align.
8. Best Use Cases
0.23mm CRGO prime limb material is particularly suitable for:
Transformer manufacturers
Core cutting units
Job work processors
Medium batch production
Urgent delivery requirements
These segments benefit most from improved utilization.
9. What Buyers Should Check
Before procurement, buyers should verify:
Limb length compatibility
Notch configuration (miter, V-notch, etc.)
Grain direction alignment
Thickness confirmation (0.23mm)
Surface condition (rust-free, oil-free)
Dimensional alignment is key to maximizing utilization.
Conclusion
CRGO procurement is not just about price per kg — it is about maximizing usable material.
Two buyers may purchase at the same price, but the one using 0.23mm CRGO prime limb material can achieve better utilization, reduced cutting waste, and lower effective transformer core cost.
When dimensions align with transformer design, 0.23mm prime limb laminations offer a practical and efficient alternative to full coil processing.
For procurement of 0.23mm CRGO prime limb material, contact S M Steels, Chennai for current availability and sourcing support.




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