[ Contact Info / Three Column ]

Talk to Oshcut about a sheet metal RFQ.

Use this page when a part needs more context than a simple upload. Share geometry, drawings, target quantities, tolerance concerns, finish expectations, and whether you need documentation such as material certs, FAI layouts, or shipment-level traceability.

Good sheet metal communication is specific without being heavy. If the part is early stage, explain what may change and what cannot move. If the order is moving toward production, include the released drawing, revision letter, approved material, finish standard, mating components, packaging expectations, and any customer flow-down requirements. Oshcut can then respond to the actual manufacturing risks instead of asking disconnected follow-up questions across several emails.

Engineering review

Send DFM questions, bend concerns, hardware insertion notes, and material alternatives.

[email protected]

RFQ desk

Send quote packs, revision changes, production timing, and commercial terms for review.

[email protected]

Quality records

Ask about material certificates, first article layouts, inspection data, and shipment documentation.

[email protected]
[ Quote Form / Two Column ]

Submit the practical details once.

The fastest review usually includes the file format, material grade, thickness, bend count, hardware callouts, finish requirement, quantity, target date, and any inspection documents your customer expects. If you do not know every detail yet, explain the uncertainty so Oshcut can respond with options instead of assumptions. For example, a prototype enclosure may need two finish paths compared, while a repeat bracket may need a stable packing method and a simple dimensional report. The form is structured to capture that context once, then route it to the right review path.