Bringing a sheet-metal design from CAD to real-world hardware often comes down to three variables: how tightly a shop can hold your specified tolerances, how quickly it can ship finished parts, and how much engineering support you can tap along the way.
Typical production-run tolerance for laser-cut parts hovers around ±0.1 mm — tight enough for most enclosures yet still forgiving on cost — while quick-turn services now quote lead times as short as three to five days. When you add proactive DFM feedback to that mix, the odds of late-stage rework plummet.
Below are seven manufacturers that ex ...