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Die Cutting

In general, die cutting is the standard method of choice for two dimensional gaskets being produced at high volumes.

We strive to respond to all quotes within 24 hours or less

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In general die cutting is a good choice if all of the following are true:

  • The part isn’t very intricate
  • The part doesn’t have very narrow walls
  • The part isn’t larger than the size of the die press
  • The material you are cutting isn’t too thick
  • You have a lead time of over a week (for hard tooling to arive)

A Few of Our Partners


Common Die-Cutting APPLICATIONS

Custom Gasket Production
High or Production Part Volumes
Quick-Turn Prototypes

Our Experience

80M+
Parts Delivered
8,000+
Companies Served
1,000s
of Materials
Prototype & Production
Volumes

Die Cutting Materials

We can work with 1,000s of materials, and we have strategically built partnerships with industry leaders to deliver on your designs faster and with reduced costs.

Solid Materials
BISCO Silicone Cellular Foam-2
Foams
bisco-bf-2000-ultra-soft-silicone-foam
EMI Shielding Materials
EMI-Shielding-1
Thermal Interface Materials
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Sound Dampening
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Microwave Absorption
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CASE STUDY

How Flory Industries Simplifies Procurement

Learn more about how Flory Industries builds strategic supplier relationships for sourcing their die cut parts.

 

Read the Case Study
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How Does Our Process Work?

We pride ourselves on being your obvious choice as a manufacturing partner through the entire product lifecycle. We can help with the prototype to production volumes, and work with you to reduce costs and lead times along the way.

Frequently Asked Questions

Want more nitty gritty details about when die cutting is best fit for your project?

Read the full article >

Keep in mind that the ultimate tolerances we can meet on a particular design are highly dependent upon the material.

Standard tolerances >

Learn more about setting tolerances for elastomeric parts >

While die cutting is often thought of as the “lowest cost” manufacturing process, it may not always be the case.

If you are producing a relatively small volume of parts, sometimes it won’t be the most inexpensive option. In order to die cut parts, you first have to build the die (usually somewhere between $300-$700) and then pay for the production of parts. In prototype situations, where you need just a few parts, and the design itself may still change, this often isn’t worth it.

There are other factors, or creative ways in which your manufacturing partner can work with you, such that other manufacturing processes may result in lower costs, depending on your design.

All in all, no blanket rule says die cutting is cheaper than other manufacturing processes. It is all situational, and going through the DFM process will help raise options like this that you might not have considered.

Learn more >

Speak to an ENGINEER today.

We strive to get every quote turned around in 24 hours or less to make sure you get the information you need faster.

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