Capabilities
Fabriova supports drawing-led sheet metal fabrication, enclosure production, finishing coordination, and light assembly for OEM and equipment-related projects. This page shows where the factory fits before an RFQ moves into review.
- Drawing or current sample reference
- Material, thickness, and quantity
- Finish, assembly, or packing notes
- Critical fit, tolerance, or access points
Core capabilities buyers usually review first
The first review usually starts with project fit, material scope, and whether finishing or downstream support must be included from the start.
How inquiries start
Most projects begin with a drawing, sample part, reference photo, or parameter sheet so the review can move on technical facts instead of generic inquiry language.
Material and thickness range
Typical materials include steel, stainless steel, aluminum, copper, and galvanized sheet, with most quoted work falling in the 0.7mm to 6.0mm range.
Production coverage
Fabriova combines fabrication, forming, welding, finishing coordination, light assembly, and packing support when the project benefits from fewer supplier handoffs.
Best-fit projects and RFQ inputs
The best fit is a project with enough technical definition to quote, sample, or move into repeat supply without a long clarification loop.
Good-fit project types
- Custom structural parts, brackets, covers, and formed components
- Electrical or equipment enclosure projects that need cutouts, fit checks, and surface finishing
- Projects that benefit from connecting fabrication, finishing, and light assembly in one supply chain
- Buyers who already have drawings, reference samples, or a defined parameter sheet
What helps review faster
- Material, thickness, quantity, and finishing requirements
- Critical dimensions, tolerance expectations, and fit constraints
- Sample quantity vs batch expectation
- Whether the job also needs finishing, packing, or assembly coordination
A clear capability-led workflow
Most projects move through the same basic path: review the part, confirm process checkpoints, then align finish, assembly, and shipment needs where required.
Review the drawing or sample
Start with what the part needs to do, what material it uses, and where cost or production risk is likely to appear.
Confirm process route and checkpoints
Match the job to fabrication, forming, welding, finishing, and assembly needs, and make the likely checkpoints visible to the buyer.
Move from sample clarity to repeat delivery
Keep the story grounded in sample confirmation, consistency, packing readiness, and shipment support rather than abstract promises.
Capability FAQ
What kind of projects fit Fabriova best?
Fabriova fits drawing-led sheet metal parts, enclosure work, and projects that also need finishing, packing, or light assembly coordinated in the same conversation.
Can Fabriova support both samples and repeat production?
Yes. Many projects start with a sample or pilot order and then move into repeat batch quantities once the drawing, fit, and finish requirements are confirmed.
What is the best first RFQ input?
A drawing, sample reference, or parameter sheet is the best start, followed by material, thickness, quantity, and any finishing or assembly requirements already known.
If the job already has drawings, start with the RFQ details.
The cleanest next step is still a drawing-led inquiry with material, thickness, quantity, and any downstream requirements included early.