If you have ever waited a week for a fixture quote and then received three follow-up questions instead of a price, you already know the problem. Workholding quotes rarely stall because the supplier is slow. They stall because the request does not contain enough information for an engineer to size the fixture and commit to a number.
This guide lists exactly what to send so a workholding supplier can quote quickly, why each item matters, and a copy-paste template you can drop into an email or our RFQ form.
Fast-quote checklist
- Part: size range, material, and the surface you can clamp on.
- Machine: model, table size, and spindle orientation.
- Accuracy: tolerance and repeatability target.
- Process: roughing, finishing, EDM, or mixed.
- Automation: manual load, robot, or pallet/FMS.
- Commercials: quantity/stations and timeline.
Why workholding quotes stall
A fixture is sized from the job, not from a catalogue line. Without the part geometry and the machine, an engineer cannot confirm clamping force, datum strategy, tool access, or whether a standard product fits. So the supplier either guesses (and you get a number you cannot trust) or asks questions (and you lose days). Sending complete inputs the first time is the single biggest lever on quote speed.
The 8 inputs that unlock a fast quote
- Part size range. The smallest and largest parts in the family, not just today's part.
- Material and surface condition. Machined, cast, forged or saw-cut — this drives clamping force and jaw choice.
- Clampable surface or datum. Where the fixture can hold and locate without hitting the cut.
- Machine model and table size. Plus 3-axis, 4-axis or 5-axis and horizontal or vertical.
- Tolerance and repeatability target. A real number (for example ≤0.02 mm) beats "high precision".
- Operation type. Roughing, finishing, EDM or a mix changes rigidity and force needs.
- Automation plan. Manual loading, robot loading, or a zero-point/pallet workflow.
- Quantity and timeline. Station count, annual volume, and when you need it.
CAD, STEP and drawings: what actually helps
A 3D STEP file is the most useful single attachment, because it lets the engineer check tool access and clamping in context. Pair it with a dimensioned 2D drawing that calls out the critical tolerances and datums. If you do not have CAD yet, clear photos with a few key dimensions are enough to begin — you will get a budget range now and a firm quote once the model arrives.
Worried about confidentiality? Share only the clamping-relevant geometry and ask for an NDA. You do not need to hand over your entire product model to define a fixture.
Copy-paste RFQ template
Part: [name / family] — material [ ], size range [min–max mm]
Clamp/datum surface: [face / OD / bore / cast skin]
Machine: [model], table [size], [3/4/5-axis], [vertical/horizontal]
Tolerance / repeatability target: [e.g. ≤0.02 mm]
Operation: [roughing / finishing / EDM / mixed]
Automation: [manual / robot / pallet / FMS]
Quantity / stations: [ ] — Needed by: [date]
Attachments: [STEP] [2D drawing] [photos]
Drop that into our RFQ form with your files and you have given us everything needed to respond with a real configuration instead of a generic PDF.
What happens after you send it
With complete data, expect a standard configuration quote in roughly one to three business days. Custom fixtures get an engineering review first — we confirm clamping force, datum scheme and tool access, then quote. Either way, the clock starts when the inputs are complete, so the checklist above is the fastest path to a number you can act on.
Ready for a fast workholding quote?
Send your part data, STEP file and machine details. Our engineers will confirm the configuration and reply with a quote-ready answer.
Request a Workholding Quote