In-house precision machining and fabrication from our MIDC Talwade facility — supporting automotive buyers who need repeatable batch production under a documented quality system.
HMC, VMC, and CNC turning for forged and machined automotive components — prismatic and rotational parts from castings, forgings, fabrications, and bar stock with in-house programming and inspection.
Laser cutting, CNC bending, and in-house welding for fabricated automotive parts — brackets, panels, and welded assemblies that complement machined components on the same campus.
Certified quality management system with documented process control across precision machining and fabrication departments.
SPC checks, Poka-yoke error-proofing, and Kaizen continuous improvement practices support our zero-rejection approach to dimensional conformance on production runs.
Batch and repeat-order support for automotive buyers who need consistent output once a part is qualified — not one-off prototyping only.
General machining and fabrication capacity for two-wheeler-related component work — share your drawing and application for a feasibility review.
Before placing automotive component work with any supplier, buyers typically verify that machining and fabrication are performed in-house or under clear accountability — not silently subcontracted without your knowledge. Ask whether the shop can show its machine fleet, inspection equipment, and how drawing revisions are tracked from quote through production.
Quality documentation matters as much as quoted price. Confirm the supplier operates under a recognized management system — for example ISO 9001:2015 — and understand how in-process checks are applied. Statistical process control (SPC), error-proofing (Poka-yoke), and structured improvement (Kaizen) are common indicators that a shop treats repeatability as a production requirement, not an afterthought.
Evaluate communication and lead-time realism early. A capable supplier should review your drawing, tolerances, and batch quantities before committing to schedule, and should explain which operations — machining, fabrication, or both — will run on their floor. Site visits, sample approvals, and clear escalation paths reduce risk when you move from trial quantities to repeat production.
Minimum order quantities depend on part geometry, material, and setup requirements. Share your drawing and quantity targets via WhatsApp or phone — we respond within 24 hours with a project-specific assessment and quote.