Brand

Durma Fabrication Machinery

Durma is a global manufacturer of metal fabrication machinery, including press brakes, shears, punch presses, and laser cutting machines. Based in Turkey, Durma is recognized for producing robust, cost-effective equipment with modern control systems, serving a wide range of manufacturing and fabrication environments.

Durma is a global leader in metal fabrication machinery, manufacturing press brakes, shears, punch presses, and fiber lasers designed for versatility and reliability. Their advanced control systems and heavy-duty construction ensure precision forming and cutting across a wide range of materials.

Ideal for job shops and production facilities in the Midwest and Mountain West, Durma’s machines balance technology, affordability, and long-term dependability. They are designed to be energy efficient, very powerful, high-speed, have great endurance and enable you to manufacture your best components.

Why Choose Durma:

  • Comprehensive line of fabrication solutions
  • User-friendly CNC controls for fast setup and training
  • Heavy-duty frames for consistent accuracy

Matching the machine to your workflow

Our experienced team at Productivity is available to assist you in choosing the right machine for your application, when you’re ready, reach out to us, we’re here to help.

In the meantime, here are a few things to think about:

  • If you’re processing large sheets (say 10‑12 ft bed) and bending heavy gauge steel regularly, go for the large capacity machines (220 ton, 12 ft bed) such as the 12 ft 220 ton option.
  • If your parts are moderate size (6‑8 ft bed), material moderate thickness (say up to 6‑10 mm), and mixed product runs, a mid‑capacity (90‑ton, 10 ft) like the 90‑ton model could be ideal—it gives flexibility without over‑investing.
  • If you do mostly light gauge material (sheet metal, enclosure work, boxes), smaller bed (maybe 4‑6 m), high mix/low volume, then the 44‑ton machine is likely sufficient and offers better ROI.
  • If your workflow requires high productivity, automation (crowning, multiple axes, set‑up speed, repeatability) look for the series that have CNC/servo drives and multiple axes (Y1, Y2, X, R) like the AD‑S or AD‑R series. For example the control offering “4 Axis Y, Y2, X, R” in the AD‑S series.
  • Budget & space: Higher capacity and larger bed machines cost more, need more floor space, often require more power and more tooling.
  • Tooling flexibility: If you bend many different part types (boxes, cockpit enclosures, long flanges) you’ll want a machine with strong back‑gauge and axis flexibility.