Automation engineering teams are time-constrained by definition. Every hour spent on in-house metal cutting, deburring, or bracket fabrication is an hour not spent on motion control, sensor integration, or software. For most structural metal parts, outsourcing to a precision fabricator with fast turnaround delivers better quality at lower effective cost — once the full cost of in-house fabrication (machine time, material waste, operator time, rework) is honestly accounted for.
for complex profiles
positional tolerance
same process
Robot Arm Link Profiles and Structural Channels
The structural links that form a robot arm’s skeleton — C-channels, box sections, gusset plates, and connecting flanges — are among the most straightforward parts to outsource, and among the most time-consuming to produce in-house.
Laser-cut aluminium profiles offer the right balance of stiffness-to-weight ratio for most SCARA, delta, and collaborative arm configurations. The critical requirement is hole pattern positional accuracy — mounting holes for servo motor flanges, bearing housings, and end-effector attachment points must be in exact relative position for the kinematic chain to achieve its target repeatability.
A fabricator with CMM verification can guarantee true position of hole patterns to ±0.05mm across a batch — eliminating the shimming and iterative adjustment that in-house-cut parts routinely require during integration.
Sensor and Camera Mounting Brackets
Vision systems, force-torque sensors, proximity sensors, and LiDAR units all require precision mounting brackets that position the sensing element at an exact angle and distance relative to the robot’s working envelope. A bracket that is 1mm out of position at the sensor mount translates to 1mm of systematic error across the entire working area — an error that software compensation can partially mitigate but rarely fully eliminate.
The outsourcing argument is particularly strong here: sensor brackets are typically small-to-medium format parts in moderate quantities, the geometry often involves compound bends or angular offsets, and the correct approach is to fabricate the bracket to drawing rather than to machine it from solid. A laser-cut and CNC-bent bracket in AL6061 will hold the required angles to ±0.5° and the mounting hole positions to ±0.1mm with no secondary machining required.
Equipment Base Plates and Machine Frames
Base plates — the flat, precision-machined surfaces that automation equipment mounts to — are a strong outsourcing candidate for two reasons: they are large (making in-house cutting difficult without specialised equipment) and they require flatness and surface finish specifications that in-house sheet metal work rarely achieves consistently.
For automation equipment operating in cleanroom or semi-cleanroom environments, base plates are typically specified in SS304 or SS316 for cleanability and corrosion resistance. Stainless base plates with tapped and counter-bored hole patterns, ground flat to a specified Ra value, and passivated for surface cleanliness — this is a fabrication workflow that an experienced precision shop can execute as a single sourcing event, versus three or four separate vendors for a team trying to coordinate it internally.
Control Cabinet Panels and Enclosures
Electrical control cabinets for automation systems — the enclosures housing PLCs, motor drives, safety relays, and I/O modules — are time-consuming to produce in-house and benefit enormously from consistent precision fabrication. Cutouts for touchscreens, terminal blocks, cable glands, and ventilation must be positioned accurately, and the enclosure must close flat without warping that causes IP seal gaps.
The typical control cabinet involves laser cutting of panels, CNC bending of the box structure, welded corners for IP-rated variants, and powder coating or painting for corrosion protection. Treating this as a single outsourced assembly — rather than separate material, cutting, bending, and finishing events — reduces engineering coordination time and eliminates interoperability risk between sub-contractors.
End-Effector and Gripper Tooling Plates
End-effectors — the robot’s “hand” — contain the tooling plates, vacuum cup mounting plates, and gripper jaw carriers that directly contact the product. These parts carry the tightest tolerances in the entire robot assembly, because positional error at the end-effector directly translates to placement error.
AL7075-T6 is the material of choice for weight-sensitive end-effectors — its strength-to-weight ratio exceeds 6061 significantly, and its machinability is excellent for the precision features that gripper plates typically require: precisely positioned vacuum cup ports, fine-thread tapped holes for pneumatic fittings, and precision alignment dowel holes for rapid tooling change systems.
Outsourcing these parts to a fabricator who can take the drawing from laser cut blank through precision drill and tap to final inspection eliminates the in-house precision machining requirement that many automation teams lack or have constrained access to.
Build vs. Buy: An Honest Framework
- Geometry changes faster than fabrication lead time
- You have genuinely idle machine capacity
- Parts are too simple to justify logistics overhead
- Highly proprietary geometry that cannot be shared
- Quantities of 1–2 pieces needed within hours
- Geometry is defined and stable
- Tolerances require equipment you don’t own
- Batch size exceeds 5+ pieces
- Documentation (certs, CMM reports) is required
- Engineering time is your binding constraint
- Surface finish or coating requires specialist equipment
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