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Upload drawings for a detailed quote
Our engineering team will quickly evaluate your project based on material, precision, tolerances, surface finish and quantity, and provide a high-quality quotation together with DFM recommendations.
A Full-Process Quality Assurance Approach for Mechanical Components and Automation Modules
Built around drawings, tolerances, materials, and actual application conditions, our quality control system covers incoming material inspection, first article approval, in-process sampling, and final release. It is suitable for brackets, housings, flanges, shafts, connectors, and assembly-sensitive parts, helping you achieve more controllable results in dimensional accuracy, batch consistency, and delivery reliability.
Whether you need one-time engineering samples or long-term production supply, we can provide a practical quality control proposal and recommended inspection scope within 24 hours, as long as your RFQ includes drawings and key quality requirements.
Supported RFQ files: STEP / STP / IGES / IGS / X_T / DWG / DXF / PDF / JPG / PNG. Share your drawing set, key tolerances, material requirements, batch plan, inspection expectations, and any traceability or packaging notes at the RFQ stage.
How We Define a Qualified Mechanical Component
For mechanical component projects, our definition of a qualified part is not limited to “within tolerance.” A qualified part must also perform reliably in its target application over time and be supported by traceable quality records.
For brackets, housings, flanges, shafts, guide parts, and assembly components, a single inspected part can still hide batch inconsistency or functional risk under assembly load, vibration, temperature variation, or long-term service. That is why quality assurance must begin with drawing review, material confirmation, and process planning, then continue through in-process control and batch data management.
This definition is especially relevant for automation line structural parts, jigs and fixtures, precision transmission components, medical-related non-implant parts, and industrial modules designed for long operating cycles, where failure can trigger downtime, rework, or downstream equipment disruption.
If you have application-based acceptance requirements for critical parts, mark key dimensions, assembly datums, and CTQ / CTF characteristics in the drawing or RFQ, and describe the service environment. We will manage those features separately in the quality control plan.
Quality Management System and Certification Foundation
Our quality management system is built in line with ISO 9001 requirements, using documented procedures, record tracking, and continual improvement to keep every batch of parts under controlled production and delivery conditions.
In day-to-day operation, we maintain complete process flows and forms covering drawing review, incoming inspection, in-process control, final inspection, and nonconforming product handling. Each key checkpoint includes recording and traceability requirements, which helps support long-term programs, repeat orders, and customer audits.
This type of structured quality management is especially important for automation OEMs, equipment integrators, precision module manufacturers, and multinational projects that require consistent records and auditable evidence across long-term supply programs.
If your project involves third-party audits or customer factory audits, we can share a quality process overview and sample records in advance, and support project-level quality agreements, PPAP, or other customized documentation needs.
Drawing Review and Manufacturability Assessment
Before formal quotation and production release, we review every drawing set for manufacturability, including tolerance feasibility, measurement methods, material suitability, and potential manufacturing risks, instead of simply quoting “as drawn.”
The purpose is to prevent rework, engineering changes, or uncontrolled cost escalation caused by unnecessarily tight tolerances, hidden inspection challenges, or design details that do not match material behavior, all of which can affect lead time and assembly results later.
For example, with long shaft parts, we focus on straightness, concentricity, and machining approach. For thin-wall housings, we check wall thickness, tolerance strategy, and fixture planning. For multi-station assembly components, we confirm datum logic and fit tolerances in advance.
If you want to reduce manufacturing risk before ordering, upload your drawings together with assembly sketches, key fit notes, or functional requirements. We can provide a brief DFM suggestion to support design or tolerance adjustments.
Material Control and Incoming Quality Inspection
All metal and engineering plastic raw materials used for machining must pass incoming inspection and batch recording. For key projects, material documents such as mill certificates and RoHS / REACH declarations can be provided to ensure compliance from the source.
Material composition, strength level, heat treatment condition, and lot-to-lot differences in plate or bar stock directly affect dimensional stability, surface quality, and service life. Once material deviation occurs at the source, even strict downstream process control cannot fully recover the risk.
For projects requiring specific grades such as 6061-T6, 7075-T651, 304, 316L, 17-4PH, or designated engineering plastics, we verify certificates and labels by batch at the incoming stage. For higher-requirement programs, third-party material re-verification can also be arranged.
If your project has special requirements for lot traceability or environmental compliance, specify the required material files in the RFQ, such as MTC, RoHS / REACH declarations, or impact / tensile reports, and we will include them in the quotation and production plan.
First Article Inspection (FAI): Get the First Part Right
For new projects and critical components, we implement first article inspection before batch production. Only after the first part fully meets the drawing and agreed standards in dimensions, tolerances, appearance, and functional checkpoints will we release the subsequent batch for production.
FAI helps expose deviations in locating method, tool path, fixture setup, or inspection approach at the earliest stage of process launch, preventing the same issue from being repeated across the whole batch and protecting both cost and lead time.
This is especially important for high-precision mating parts, complex 5-axis components, multi-process machined parts, and parts that will later undergo surface finishing or heat treatment, because rework in those categories is expensive and can disrupt the full production schedule.
If you need tighter control over the first piece, you can request a first article inspection report or a defined first-piece approval method at the order stage. We can configure the appropriate FAI workflow and record template based on project importance.
In-Process Inspection and Sampling Strategy
During actual machining, we do not rely on final inspection alone. We set in-process inspection and sampling checkpoints at critical operations, using on-machine measurement, between-process inspection, or SPC methods to monitor production stability.
This allows us to detect trends as soon as parts begin to drift away from target, instead of discovering nonconformity only after the full batch is completed. The result is lower waste and lower risk of total batch rejection, which is especially valuable for medium- and high-volume orders.
For example, for shafts and fit holes, we periodically measure diameter, roundness, and positional features during production. For parts with strict flatness requirements, we perform flatness sampling after critical operations. For long-running batch programs, SPC trend data can also be introduced for further monitoring.
If certain features require dedicated process control, mark them in the RFQ or drawing as key dimensions or process-monitored features. We will define separate in-process sampling frequency and record methods in the control plan.
Final Inspection and Shipment Release Standards
After all operations are completed, each batch must pass final inspection before packaging and release. Dimensions, appearance, surface finishing, and identification must all meet the agreed standards before shipment is approved.
The goal of final inspection is not to replace earlier process control, but to act as the last barrier against visible cosmetic defects, missed features, or shipment mismatches, which is especially important for cross-region transportation and long-cycle projects.
For high-precision parts, we use tools such as CMM, height gauges, and internal / external diameter measuring instruments for dimensional confirmation. For parts with finishing requirements, we check color consistency, coverage completeness, and surface defects. When needed, summary inspection reports or photo records can also be provided.
If you want every batch to include dimensional reports, material certificates, or surface finishing evidence, define those requirements at quotation and ordering stage so they can be built into the quality plan and packing list.
Traceability and Nonconforming Product Handling
Each batch of parts is linked to its own production and inspection records. If any abnormality occurs, we can trace back to the material lot, machine, fixture, and operating records, then carry out root cause analysis and corrective / preventive actions under a CAPA workflow.
This traceability capability helps locate the source of issues quickly, prevents recurrence in later batches or other programs, and gives long-term customers a transparent quality feedback loop.
When interference or tight fit appears at the assembly site, we can retrieve the corresponding inspection data, equipment status, and operator information by batch number, then combine those records with part re-measurement to judge whether the issue comes from design, tolerance setup, material, or machining process variation.
If your project requires a defined traceability level, such as by batch, by carton, or by individual serial marking, raise it during project launch and we will design a suitable identification and record scheme based on feasibility and cost.
Quality Strategy by Order Type
We do not apply a one-size-fits-all quality method. Instead, we define the control strategy according to order type, whether prototype, low-volume validation, or stable mass supply, so that cost, lead time, and risk remain balanced.
Prototype stages focus more on validating manufacturability and functional intent. Low-volume stages focus on stabilizing process parameters and collecting quality data. Mass production stages require high consistency and high pass-through yield at an acceptable cost, so inspection frequency and methods are adjusted accordingly.
For example, for an initial 5 to 10 piece verification batch, we can provide more detailed dimensional records and issue feedback. For fixed monthly replenishment orders, we focus more on process control and sampling efficiency to maintain stable output.
If your project already has a stage plan such as prototype to validation to mass production, include it in the RFQ. We can then define matching quality control and feedback methods for each phase.
Customer Participation and Quality Communication
We encourage customer participation early in the project through online meetings, drawing communication, sample review, and issue recap, so that quality standards are jointly defined before problems appear, not after shipment risk has already formed.
For complex or high-value projects, it is far more effective to explain how the part is used, what deviation is acceptable, and which features are function-critical than to send a drawing without context. That shared understanding helps align design, machining, and assembly expectations.
Typical scenarios include first-time cooperation projects, module orders involving multiple mating parts, branded appearance components with cosmetic requirements, and projects that need to align with third-party audits or customer audit procedures.
If you have an ongoing or upcoming key project, add a note such as “quality communication required” when uploading drawings. We can then arrange an engineer to review the main quality risks and control priorities with you.
How to Lock the Quality Plan Faster at RFQ Stage
Clarifying quality requirements at the RFQ stage is the fastest way to receive an accurate quotation and an executable quality control plan.
An RFQ that lacks critical information leads to repeated questions and multiple evaluation rounds, which wastes time and increases the risk of mismatched quality expectations. A complete RFQ allows engineering and quality teams to evaluate materials, process routing, inspection method, and lead time in one cycle.
We recommend that your RFQ includes at least the following: drawing files such as STEP, STP, IGS, X_T, or PDF; material and heat treatment requirements; surface finishing requirements; quantity and batch plan; critical dimensions and tolerances; whether inspection reports or material certificates are required; and any special traceability or packaging instructions.
If you are not sure which quality clauses should be included in the RFQ, you can first submit your current drawings and draft requirements. We can organize a project-suitable RFQ quality checklist based on experience.
Make Quality Start from the First Drawing
High-quality mechanical components are not selected at the end by inspection alone. They are built from the beginning through the right drawing logic, material control, process planning, and in-process discipline.
When application conditions, key dimensions, material behavior, and delivery rhythm are managed under one quality control logic, the result is not a one-time lucky sample but a repeatable, traceable, assembly-ready part that can be delivered with stability in real projects.
Whether your project is still in solution review, drawing finalization, or batch execution, if it involves brackets, housings, flanges, shafts, connectors, guide parts, or complex assembly structures, we can help define the appropriate quality path based on current project information and past experience.
If you want to bring quality risk under control at an early stage, the most direct method is to upload your drawings and quality requirements with the RFQ. We will respond within 24 hours with a project-oriented quality control suggestion, recommended inspection scope, and expected delivery rhythm.
Upload Drawings Early to Define the Right Quality Path
The faster we receive your drawings, tolerance priorities, material notes, and inspection expectations, the faster we can align quotation, manufacturing risk, and delivery planning into one executable quality route.
This is especially useful for brackets, housings, flanges, shafts, connectors, guide parts, and complex assembly-sensitive components that require stable dimensional control, batch consistency, and traceable production records.
Suggested files and requirements: STEP / STP / IGES / IGS / X_T / DWG / DXF / PDF / JPG / PNG, critical dimensions, CTQ / CTF notes, material grade, heat treatment, surface finish, inspection report expectations, traceability level, and packaging instructions.
Need a quick engineering discussion before formal RFQ? Use WhatsApp for a direct conversation, or upload the current drawing pack and note “quality communication required.”