Equipment frames
Welded supports, guard frames, machine bases, reinforcement structures, and brackets that need squareness and fit checks.

Sheet metal welding service
Black Iron Metal supports welded sheet metal projects that need practical review of weld location, appearance, distortion, fixture planning, post-weld finishing, inspection, and export packing before quotation.
Use this service when separate cut and bent components must become a stable bracket, frame, cabinet, enclosure, guard, or equipment assembly.

These details help buyers compare suppliers on manufacturability, visible quality, assembly fit, and repeat production control.
| Decision area | Buyer risk | RFQ detail to include |
|---|---|---|
| Weld location and length | Unclear weld scope can change strength, distortion, finishing labor, and price. | Mark weld locations, weld type if defined, continuous or intermittent needs, and hidden versus visible welds. |
| Assembly fit | Heat distortion can move holes, rails, doors, brackets, and mating faces after individual parts are accurate. | Provide assembly drawings, critical datums, mating parts, door gap, hole alignment, and flatness needs. |
| Appearance level | Over-grinding hidden welds adds cost; under-defining visible welds can create sample disputes. | Separate structural welds, visible seams, ground areas, coated faces, brushed faces, and acceptable marks. |
| Material and finish | Stainless, aluminum, carbon steel, and galvanized steel need different heat and surface expectations. | State material grade, thickness, finish plan, coating sequence, passivation or brushing notes if relevant. |
| Packing and shipment | Welded assemblies can be bulky, heavy, sharp-edged, or easy to scratch after coating. | Define separators, corner protection, carton limits, pallet needs, label rules, and destination country. |
These examples help buyers identify when the RFQ needs assembly-level review rather than only individual flat part pricing.
Welded supports, guard frames, machine bases, reinforcement structures, and brackets that need squareness and fit checks.
Cabinet shells, doors, mounting rails, internal supports, access panels, and housings with cosmetic or coating expectations.
Welded mounting brackets, gussets, support arms, tabs, and assemblies that connect to customer equipment.
Customer-facing guards, covers, and panels where weld marks, grinding, and powder coating appearance must be agreed early.
Laser cut, CNC bent, hardware-installed, welded, finished, and packed parts managed as one fabrication route.
Approved welded parts that need fixture control, sample baseline, inspection priority, and packing consistency.
Inspection should focus on the features that affect assembly fit, appearance approval, and export receiving quality.
Check overall size, squareness, flatness, door gap, rail spacing, bracket location, hole alignment, and assembly clearances.
Review bead location, grinding marks, spatter, sharp edges, visible seams, coating coverage, and protected cosmetic faces.
Confirm separators, corner protection, foam, carton strength, pallet method, labels, and approved sample references for repeat orders.
Use these image-led paths to connect a weldment with the right product family, material route, upstream process, or export packing review.

Doors, frames, hinges, grounding points, mounting rails, powder coating sequence, and protected export packing.

Mounting plates, internal brackets, cable openings, door gaps, hole alignment, and repeatable weld fixtures.

Mild steel grade, weld location, distortion, grinding, corrosion protection, powder coating, and cost baseline.

Hardware sequence, fit checks, labels, separators, carton limits, pallet rules, and destination notes.
Use these pages to connect welding decisions with cutting, bending, material choice, and full-process fabrication requirements.
Review bend radius, hole-to-bend distance, formed dimensions, cosmetic faces, and bend sequence before welding.
Review mild steel welding, powder coating, inspection, and cost-sensitive fabricated assemblies.
Review cutting, bending, welding, hardware, finishing, assembly, inspection, and export packing under one workflow.
If the weldment becomes part of a cabinet, enclosure, control box, or OEM housing, these product pages help connect weld review with fit, finish, hardware, and packing requirements.
Review welded doors, frames, rails, hinge areas, grounding points, finish sequence, and protected packing.
Clarify visible seams, ground areas, fit, cleaning expectations, labels, and protective packing.
Connect welded cabinet structure with vents, doors, coating, gasket faces, mounting points, and repeat builds.
Review welded control boxes, brackets, rails, mounting plates, hole alignment, and hardware timing.
Route welded housings through material, fixture, finish, revision, assembly fit, and export packing review.
Send assembly drawings, part drawings, 3D files if available, material, thickness, finish, quantity, weld location, visible surfaces, critical datums, inspection priorities, packing requirements, and destination country.
Separate hidden functional welds from visible exterior seams. Define which welds need grinding, which surfaces are cosmetic, what coating or brushing follows welding, and which marks are unacceptable.
Share assembly context, critical dimensions after welding, flatness needs, door gaps, mating parts, fixture references, weld length expectations, and whether design alternatives such as formed tabs or shorter welds are acceptable.
Send assembly context and weld requirements so the quote can include fit-up, finishing, inspection, and packing review.
Start with name, work email, country, and project type. Quantity and drawings can be added later.