We're a manufacturer, but we're an engineer-led one. Anthony Gross runs the floor
as Chief Engineer, and we keep two full-time design engineers on staff. They review
every quote, run Moldflow analysis on the parts that need it, and walk customers
through Design for Manufacturability — DfM — before tooling is cut, not after.
Reviews of part geometry, draft angles, gating, wall thickness, and feature placement before tooling design begins. We catch the problems that show up at first shot — six weeks earlier.
Submit a part for DfM reviewFill simulation, packing analysis, cooling analysis, and warpage prediction using Moldflow Plastics Advisers. Output: a documented recommendation, not a black-box answer.
We work natively in STEP, IGES, SolidWorks, Solid Edge, Inventor, and AutoCAD. Send what you have. We'll convert, clean, or rebuild.
Cost reduction, weight reduction, supplier-exit recovery, end-of-life resin substitution. We salvage parts that have problems, and rebuild them so they don't.
Re-engineer a partWorking from samples, broken parts, or scans. We capture the geometry, document the design intent, and produce manufacturable drawings.
Resin recommendations grounded in load case, environment, regulatory needs, and budget. We pull on supplier technical services when a complex spec calls for it.
A 90-minute first-pass review covers the issues that cause 80% of tooling rework. It's free. We do it because catching a problem at the CAD stage is fifty times cheaper than catching it at first shot.
Every DfM review concludes with a written summary you can share with your team. It includes:
If the part isn't a good fit for our shop, the review will say that, too. We'd rather lose a quote than lose a customer's confidence.
Send us your CAD. The DfM review is free, and the engineering team will
get back to you in one business day.