Can I send a rough requirement before final drawings are ready?
Yes. Send your current assumptions first, then mark pending items clearly so we can return a provisional quote scope.
Share your application, target specs, and quantity plan. We will respond with practical engineering and sourcing support.
Inquiry Email
Include target torque/speed, quantity, and delivery location.
| Required Item | Example | Why It Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Target motor family | NEMA 17 / NEMA 23 / closed-loop | Quickly narrows viable models and quote range. |
| Torque at speed | 1.2 N·m at 600 RPM | Prevents over-reliance on holding torque only. |
| Mechanical interface | Shaft, flange, connector drawing revision | Avoids sample mismatch and assembly rework. |
| Quantity plan | Prototype qty + annual forecast | Improves lead-time and pricing accuracy. |
| Destination and terms | Country, Incoterm, requested ship date | Aligns packaging, documents, and shipping plan early. |
Yes. Send your current assumptions first, then mark pending items clearly so we can return a provisional quote scope.
Use a revision-controlled change request with effective lot and impact scope agreed by both teams.
Yes. Please list required document types in the RFQ stage so they are included in validation and delivery planning.
If your team needs a fast start, use this structure in the first email. It improves quote precision and reduces clarification cycles.
| Output | Purpose | Buyer Action |
|---|---|---|
| Model and architecture direction | Narrow viable options against torque-speed and interface assumptions. | Confirm baseline model path before cost-detail discussion. |
| RFQ clarification list | Close data gaps that affect pricing and lead-time accuracy. | Return missing values and drawing references in one reply. |
| Validation recommendation | Define sample test scope and acceptance evidence for technical sign-off. | Align internal engineering and procurement gates before PO. |