


Reach out through our contact page or request a quote with your project details. We’ll review what you’re looking to accomplish, discuss how we can help, and provide a quote if the project is a good fit. If we’re not the right shop for the work, we’ll tell you that too. The goal is to establish whether there’s a good match between what you need and what we offer, and then move forward from there if it makes sense for both parties.
We address it. If a dimension is off, a weld doesn’t pass inspection, or something doesn’t fit properly, we own the problem and make it right. This might involve rework, repair, or replacement, depending on what’s needed. We document non-conformances, evaluate their impact, and involve you in disposition decisions when appropriate. Mistakes happen in any fabrication work—what matters is how they’re handled. We handle them transparently, responsibly, and with a focus on getting to the right outcome rather than deflecting blame.
Yes. We are happy to provide references from contractors or facility owners who have used our services on similar work. We respect confidentiality, so we ask permission before sharing contact information. Many long-term contractor relationships are willing to speak with teams considering similar work.
References can address our technical capabilities, reliability, documentation, schedule performance, and how we work as a back-end partner.
We can work either way, depending on project specifics and the contractor’s preference. For well-defined scope with clear drawings and specifications, fixed-price work can provide useful cost certainty.
For projects where scope is less certain, field conditions may change, or troubleshooting is part of the work, time-and-materials may be the more practical structure. We can talk through the project and recommend the approach that keeps expectations clear for everyone involved.
We don’t have a strict minimum, but very small projects—single fittings or minor repairs—may not be the best fit for what we do. We’re most valuable on projects that involve some complexity, specialized materials, or work that benefits from shop fabrication efficiency. If you’re unsure whether your project is a good fit, reach out and we’ll give you an honest assessment. Sometimes the answer is yes, sometimes it’s better served by a local shop or your own crew, and we’ll tell you either way.
We offer both. Much of our work is shop fabrication where assemblies are built in our controlled environment and shipped for installation by the contractor’s crew. But we also provide field installation services when it makes sense—installing prefabricated assemblies we built, tie-ins to existing systems, or field welds that can’t be completed in the shop. Some contractors prefer to handle all field work themselves; others appreciate the continuity of having the shop that fabricated the work also install it. We adapt to your preference and project needs.
For smaller assemblies, we can arrange shipping via common carrier with appropriate packaging and protection to prevent damage in transit. For larger or more complex assemblies, freight forwarding or specialized transport may be required, and we’ll coordinate logistics based on project specifics. For local projects, we can deliver directly using our own vehicles. If your project involves field installation, our crews bring the assemblies with them. We’re flexible and work out logistics that make sense for the project size, destination, and timeline.
Sometimes, depending on material availability and shop capacity. Expediting usually involves prioritizing your work in our schedule and possibly paying premiums for expedited material procurement or overtime labor. We’re honest about what’s achievable—if a timeline isn’t realistic, we’ll say so rather than overpromising and underdelivering. If you have a genuine emergency or time-critical need, reach out and we’ll discuss options.
We prefer detailed drawings—isometrics, fabrication drawings, or marked-up prints that clearly show dimensions, materials, connection types, and any special requirements. That said, we can work from field measurements when necessary, such as tie-ins to existing systems where as-built conditions need to be verified. For complex assemblies or tight-tolerance work, accurate drawings reduce risk and ensure proper fit-up. If your drawings are incomplete or ambiguous, we’ll flag issues and work with you to clarify before we start cutting.
Lead times vary depending on material availability, project complexity, and our current workload. For standard materials and straightforward fabrication, lead times might be 2-4 weeks. For exotic alloys or specialized work requiring material procurement or procedure qualifications, lead times can extend to 6-8 weeks or longer. We provide realistic timelines during quoting and update you if anything changes. If you’re working with a tight deadline, let us know upfront and we’ll discuss whether we can accommodate it, possibly through expedited material procurement or prioritized scheduling.
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