Ginwate CNC — home
Milling · Turning · 5-Axis · EDM — under one roof

CNC Machining Services
Engineered in Dongguan, China

Custom CNC parts machined to print under an ISO 9001 quality system — from a single prototype through ongoing production. Pick the deeper page below for specifics, or send a drawing and let a manufacturing engineer build the quote for you.

Choose the right axis count

More axes mean fewer setups and better contoured-surface finish — but they're not always the cheapest path. Each tier links to its dedicated page for guidance and examples.

Materials

Aluminum, stainless, titanium, brass, copper, carbon and alloy steels, plus engineering plastics — each with a dedicated guide.

From drawing to shipment

The path every project follows — short enough to read in a minute, structured enough that nothing is left to chance.

01

Send Your Drawing

Upload STL, STEP, IGES, DWG or PDF through the quote engine. A manufacturing engineer reviews every submission.

02

DFM Review

We flag tolerance, datum and material questions before machining begins so you avoid mid-run surprises.

03

Engineered Quote

You receive a written quote with material, process plan, finish and packaging called out — not just a number.

04

Production

Parts are run on the appropriate platform (milling, turning, EDM, grinding) under our quality system.

05

Inspection & Ship

First-article inspection with dimensional and visual checks; export documentation prepared for international shipping.

CNC machining FAQ

Decision-help questions that come up in nearly every project.

What's the difference between CNC milling and CNC turning?

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Milling holds the part fixed and rotates a cutting tool against it — best for prismatic, pocketed or contoured shapes. Turning rotates the part against a stationary tool — best for cylindrical and shaft-like geometry. Many real parts use both, and mill-turn machines can finish them in a single setup so accumulated error from re-fixturing disappears.

When should I specify 5-axis machining instead of 3- or 4-axis?

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Choose 5-axis when the part has compound surfaces that can't be reached cleanly from a single direction, when consolidating multiple setups reduces stack-up error, or when surface finish on contoured features matters. For boxy parts with features on one or two faces, 3- or 4-axis is usually faster and lower cost.

Which CAD file formats do you accept?

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STEP and IGES are preferred for 3D models because they preserve geometry, tolerances and surface features cleanly. STL works for prototypes and the in-browser quote viewer. We also accept SolidWorks part / assembly files, DXF and DWG for 2D, and PDF drawings for manual review.

How do I pick a material?

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Start from the functional requirements: strength, weight, corrosion environment, temperature, electrical conductivity, surface finish needs. Our materials guides cover the trade-offs in detail — if you're unsure, send your drawing and we'll suggest grades that fit the application and the budget.

Do you handle prototype quantities and production runs on the same line?

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Yes — the same machines run single-piece prototypes and ongoing production batches. Most projects start with a small validation batch before scaling. We hold no minimum order quantity, so a one-off prototype is welcome.

Engineer-reviewed quotes· ISO 9001 production· NDA available

Ready to machine a real part?

Send your CAD file. A manufacturing engineer reviews it and replies with a written quote — process plan, finish, packaging called out.

Secure CAD upload. NDA available. See privacy policy.