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Zinc-Coated Steel Welding: Clean Processes for Tough Challenges
Part 4 By Georgi Mitev, Senior Account Manager
Zinc-coated steel is widely used in automotive and construction industries due to its excellent corrosion resistance. However, welding zinc-coated material introduces additional challenges. The zinc layer can vaporize during welding, leading to increased spatter, blow holes, and inconsistent penetration if not properly controlled.
For manufacturers, this often makes zinc-coated steel one of the most difficult materials to weld consistently — especially in high-volume production. Panasonic’s welding samples address this challenge directly by showcasing specialized waveforms and controlled heat input designed specifically for coated materials.
The zinc-coated steel welding applications highlight how advanced processes reduce spatter, stabilize the arc, and maintain joint strength across different part types, including structural and safety-critical automotive components.
Viewed alongside standard steel, stainless steel, and aluminium applications, these samples underline an important message: effective robotic welding is not just about automation, but about material-specific process optimization — an area where Panasonic’s welding expertise delivers clear value.
🔍 Featured Zinc-Coated Steel Applications
- Fuel fillers: thin plates with low-spatter MAG welding
- Crash boxes: critical automotive parts requiring maximum strength
- Seat components & pipes: optimized parameters to minimize blow holes and spatter
🔄 Cross-Reference
Just like our steel, stainless steel, and aluminium samples, these examples show Panasonic’s flexibility and process control across different material types, helping customers make confident, data-driven decisions.

Georgi Mitev
Senior Account Manager
Panasonic
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