Held to the print, from first article to final assembly.
Machining, cutting, forming, and welding in steel, stainless, and aluminum, from a single replacement part to repeat production. Every drawing gets a genuine review before material moves: tolerances, material behavior, and the places where the print and the physical world are going to disagree.
Check these numbers against your drawing.
If the part fits these envelopes, send the drawing. What comes back is an honest assessment and a price, from a shop that reads prints closely enough to catch the problems before they are parts.
Send a drawing
One model carries the part from design to steel.
Quality here is not inspected in at the end; it is inherited. The approved SolidWorks model is the same file that generates the machining programs, the waterjet nests, and the bend sequences, so nothing gets redrawn, re-measured, or re-interpreted between design and fabrication.
That unbroken lineage removes errors before they exist. Dimensions cannot drift between steps, a revision propagates everywhere at once, and the part that comes off the machine matches the part that was approved on screen, the first time and the hundredth.
What precision looks like mid-build.
Documented when it matters.
Certified material with mill certs and traceability, hole preparation to aerospace standards, and positional tolerances held to thousandths, applied when the drawing calls for it and skipped when it does not, so the part only carries the rigor it needs. On production builds, the first article can come to site for fit and acceptance before the rest are finished.
The same envelopes cover one-piece emergencies, decorative production runs where laser welding hides every fastener behind a finished face, and repeat factory hardware that gets quietly better with every run.