“…One is the difficulty of wear control in the schedule-free rolling (SFR) process, and the other is the increasingly stringent requirement on the strip quality including profile and flatness in the non-oriented electrical steel production. [1,2] In order to solve the problem, the new-generation hightech rolling mills, such as Continuously Variable Crown (CVC), K-WRS (Kawasaki-Work Roll Shifting) and PC (Pair Cross), with effective profile and flatness technologies, are established and have been applied widely. The K-WRS mill could make work roll wear dispersive and uniform by the symmetrical roll contour and periodic shifting, but the work roll "U" groove-type wear still exists and the K-WRS technology is incapable of the crown control as suggested by Cao et al [3] The CVC and PC mill can provide a wide crown control range by shifting the CVC work roll or crossing the conventional rolls, respectively, but it is incapable of the wear control as suggested by John et al [2,3] Combined with the developed lubricating rolling technology, high speed steel (HSS) roll, on-line roll grinder (ORG) and other devices, these mills can improve the strip profile and flatness with the complicated system.…”