Industry Context
Evaluate cost-down potential by machining environment.
Medical, aerospace, and electronics programs each carry different risk tolerances and tooling consumption patterns. ZENOK's cost-down evaluation starts from your production context — material, feature size, tolerance, and current spend — not from a generic catalog selection.
Medical, aerospace, and electronics programs each carry different risk tolerances and tooling consumption patterns. ZENOK's cost-down evaluation starts from your production context — material, feature size, tolerance, and current spend — not from a generic catalog selection.
01
Medical Machining
Medical programs reward suppliers who can protect miniature-feature quality while lowering tool cost across repeat production.
• Titanium and stainless steel workflows (Ti-6Al-4V, 316L)
• Tolerances down to ±0.005 mm on miniature features
• Stable surface finish Ra requirements for implant-grade parts
• High consumption volume = high cost-down leverage
02
Aerospace Machining
Aerospace programs need lower landed cost without compromising qualified process windows on high-value materials.
• High-value materials: Inconel, titanium alloys, hardened steels
• Small features on structural and fluid-path components
• Repeatable process windows to protect part qualification status
• Per-tool cost reduction compounds across long production runs
03
Electronics Manufacturing
Electronics tooling programs gain the most when micro-diameter consumption is high and each cost-down win repeats across many cycles.
• Micro cavities, connector molds, and housing details
• Feature replication accuracy in high-cycle tooling programs
• Fine geometry at 0.1–1.0 mm diameter range
• Volume consumption makes cost-down proposals most impactful
