QUOTEFlow3D
Scale 3D Printed Products Without Restarting Supplier Qualification
Large-scale additive production is not a machine-count claim. It is a controlled path from an approved design to parallel builds, repeat orders, consistent finishing, and delivery planning. QuoteFlow3D collects the information needed to review whether that path fits your product.
Good fit when
- Validated products that need pilot and repeat batches
- Demand-driven production where inventory risk matters
- Larger parts or product families that can run in parallel
- Programs that include finishing, assembly, kitting, or packing
Review in the RFQ
- Test, pilot, release, and estimated annual volumes
- Approved file revision and sample acceptance criteria
- Material, color, finish, assembly, and packaging requirements
- Target delivery window, destination, and split-shipment options
- Batch identification, inspection, reporting, and exception rules
Limits to confirm
- A quantity is not accepted until current capacity is confirmed.
- Stable very-high-volume products may be more economical with injection molding.
- Unverified machine counts and response times are intentionally not published.
Frequently asked questions
Can you publish a maximum batch size?
Not responsibly without verified part and capacity data. Submit the geometry, quantities, and delivery plan for a capacity review.
How do you keep parallel builds consistent?
The production plan should define the approved revision, material, process record, sample reference, and batch checks before release.
Can I split a production release?
Add the preferred release cadence and destinations to the RFQ. Split production and shipment must be confirmed in the quote.
When does molding become more suitable?
Molding can be more economical when the design and demand are stable enough to justify tooling and larger inventory commitments.
Request an engineer-reviewed production quote