In most cases, machinery is built in volumes of singles, dozens, or hundreds, not thousands. Companies looking to outsource the manufacture of their equipment realize there are some inherent benefits, but I’m not completely convinced they know exactly what these benefits are, so let’s dig in.

1. Design for Manufacturing and Assembly (DFMA)

DFMA is the practice of using design techniques to optimize manufacturing and assembly time for the final goal of improving price. In our experience, 85-90% of companies outsourcing machinery manufacturing are actively seeking DFMA ideas. They know they need it; they simply have no clue how to do DFMA and aren’t shy about it.
5 Benefits of Outsourcing Machinery Manufacturing
5 Benefits of Outsourcing Machinery Manufacturing
Most OEMs are excellent at developing and preparing the core technology of their machinery, but due to the prototype process usually requiring ordering hundreds of parts from dozens of independent quick turn suppliers just to get the prototype to function properly in the first place, the ability to holistically optimize a new machinery technology for DFMA becomes very foggy. Not to mention that most machine design engineers at OEMs are not required to have this skillset. It ends up falling on the contract manufacturing company, although many lack this skill entirely as well.

2. Commercialization

Commercializing a prototype machine so that it is ready to be produced at steady state is a huge task. How long does it take to manufacture machinery at full volume? 6-18 months from prototype to production-ready is great rule of thumb. This depends on factors like technology maturity, size complexity and many others but this is a good guideline. Speed is important to hit the market fast but not at the sacrifice of quality, repeatability, and functionality.
The commercialization process is very iterative and requires a strong feedback loop from design engineering, manufacturing engineering and assemblers. Some common tasks in the commercialization process are bill of materials updates, component print rev changes, functional testing, quality planning, and production planning.

3. Cost

More often than not, the first question people want to ask is “how much does it cost to build my hardware?” Of course, that’s not any easy question to answer at a surface level, but what is typically pretty definitive is that outsourcing machinery manufacturing usually has a noticeable cost benefit. The reason is simple, contract manufacturers can leverage common resources both internally and externally across many customers. Resources like engineering, real estate, supply chain advantages, tooling, and others come to mind.
Most contract manufacturers tend to aim for slim margins (the publicly traded CMs work on a 5-9% gross margin, compared to medical OEMs who aim for roughly 60% gross margins) and have a comparatively small marketing budget (just ask me). If you think about what it costs for machinery manufacturing, you’re taking some combination of commercial off the shelf items (COTS) plus custom fabricated parts plus assembly plus labor plus some markup to make margin.
5 Benefits of Outsourcing Machinery Manufacturing
5 Benefits of Outsourcing Machinery Manufacturing
In an insource versus outsource analysis, these cost constituents are both fixed and adjusted depending on the OEM and CM capabilities. High internal burden rates for assembly, cost to setup a manufacturing cell, and costs associated with engineering and supply chain management are usually glaring reasons to outsource the equipment.

4. Turnkey Capabilities

The expectation from OEMs when outsourcing machinery manufacturing is that eventually they can place purchase orders for singular line items and viola, a perfectly built machine arrives on time and at the highest quality. From a CM perspective, that is a pretty nice arrangement as well. We’ve talked a lot about New Product Introduction and what it takes to get to that point, but that is the simple definition of “turnkey manufacturer” in our opinion.
5 Benefits of Outsourcing Machinery Manufacturing
5 Benefits of Outsourcing Machinery Manufacturing
To become a turnkey supplier will mean that the CM will have to be willing or able to manage hundreds or thousands of parts, whether custom made or purchased, manage supply chain, quality aspects, assembly and shipping. Great CMs can tout themselves as turnkey the closer they get to offering a “Place PO, Get Machine” arrangement.

5. Technology Focus

The last benefit to using a CM for equipment and machinery manufacturing outsourcing is opening up internal OEM resources to focus on their technology. Oftentimes, the machine hardware is a means to apply some core technology to the company process. It can be data collection, inspection software, chemical processing, medical imaging or countless other processes but usually the machinery is not the star of the show.
Companies quickly realize that their expensive engineering staff should not be wasting time assembling parts into a machine, but rather on sharpening the technology that the machine will apply. This is often an overlooked benefit because too many times companies want to “do it all” with the people they have instead of leaning on specialized external experts.

TECVINA – SUPPORTING INDUSTRIES

Tecvina is an international brand of Truong Thanh Mechanical Heat Joint Stock Company, based in Vietnam and established in 2008.
Email: tecvinamec@gmail.com
Hotline: 0966.500.694
Factory 1: No 31, Nguyen Du street, Duu Lau ward, Viet Tri city, Phu Tho province, Vietnam.
Factory 2: Lot 02, Thuy Van industrial zone, Thuy Van ward, Viet Tri city, Phu Tho province, Vietnam

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