Engineering Desk
DFM, tolerance review, CMM assumptions, tooling access, and inspection package planning.
[email protected]Contact should not be a vague message box when the work involves machinery components, tooling, tight tolerances, and release documentation. Use this page to route the right evidence to engineering review: drawing revision, material callout, required certs, target quantity, delivery window, and receiving-inspection expectations.
DFM, tolerance review, CMM assumptions, tooling access, and inspection package planning.
[email protected]Program intake, forecast review, purchase order routing, quote revisions, and commercial clarification.
[email protected]FAI packages, material cert questions, deviation records, and shipment documentation follow-up.
[email protected]If your part is already in production, include the reason for transfer: supplier delay, cost pressure, nonconformance history, capacity shortage, or revision change. If the project is new, include the functional purpose of the component and any risks your engineering team already sees. A small amount of context helps Dmg Mori identify whether the right first step is DFM review, controlled prototype, first article package, or repeat-order planning.
For regulated programs, please avoid sending export-controlled or proprietary packages without an NDA or controlled intake path. Let us know the required data handling expectation first, and the team will align the upload method, review access, and communication channel before detailed files are shared.
When possible, include the acceptance criteria your receiving team will use. Examples include required certificate of conformance language, CMM report format, sampling level, surface finish evidence, packaging label format, revision control notes, or whether first article approval must happen before the balance of production is released. Those details help the first response become an engineering plan instead of a generic acknowledgement.
Attach or describe the drawing package, target quantity, material, tolerance concerns, inspection level, special process needs, and due date. The more precise the intake, the faster the team can return useful assumptions instead of a generic price range.