Short answer: A ការបោះត្រាលោហៈ អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ transfer should be treated as a controlled engineering change, not only a price comparison. Send the current drawing revision, part samples, material and finish specs, inspection reports, tooling ownership status, annual volume, packaging rules, and target transition date. A good transfer plan confirms manufacturability, quality risk, and launch timing before production is moved.
This guide is for buyers who already have a stamped part in production and need to qualify a new អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ because of cost, delivery, capacity, quality, or regional sourcing requirements. អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ transfer work is high intent because the buyer usually has a real part, real demand, and a deadline.
If you are preparing a transfer package, send drawings and current production details through the RFQ form. For a broader quote checklist, also review the ការបោះត្រាលោហៈ RFQ checklist and the អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ quality audit checklist.
What to include in a transfer RFQ
| Transfer item | Why it matters | What to send |
|---|---|---|
| Controlled drawing | Prevents quoting from an obsolete revision. | 2D PDF, 3D STEP, revision level, and change notes. |
| Current samples | Show real forming, burr, finish, and packaging conditions. | Good parts, rejected parts if useful, and photos of assembly issues. |
| Tooling status | Changes timing, cost, and risk. | Tool ownership, tool age, maintenance notes, and whether the die can move. |
| Quality records | Shows which dimensions and defects actually matter. | FAI, CMM report, control plan, PPAP-like file, or inspection checklist. |
| Commercial demand | Sets tooling and launch assumptions. | Monthly demand, annual volume, first order, safety stock, and transition date. |
Decide whether tooling will move or be rebuilt
The first អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់-transfer question is usually tooling. If the current die is owned by the buyer and can be moved, the new អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ still needs to inspect it, check press compatibility, review spare inserts, and run trial parts. A moved die may need repair, sensor updates, new fixtures, or a setup sheet before it can run repeatably.
If the existing tool cannot move, quote new tooling from the drawing and samples. This is a chance to review known problems such as burr direction, strip layout, material utilization, weak forming stations, or inconsistent flatness. Related pages include the tooling cost guide, ពុម្ពបន្ត design checklist, and ពុម្ពបន្ត stamping.
Compare the drawing to the real part
Many transfer projects reveal a gap between the drawing and the part that has been accepted for years. The bend angle may have drifted, a burr note may be missing, plating thickness may not match the drawing, or a hole position may be held tighter than the title block suggests.
Before quoting production, mark what is controlled by the drawing and what is a current-process habit. For example, an assembly team may rely on a burr-free edge that is not called out, or a connector housing may need a clip height that was never listed as critical. The new អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ should not guess which differences are acceptable.
Define the quality handover
A transfer is less risky when the quality plan is explicit. Send current inspection reports and explain which dimensions caused past rejects. Ask the new អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ how first samples will be measured and which gauges or fixtures are needed. If the part has safety, electrical, weld, or assembly functions, mark those dimensions as critical.
Useful references include the first article inspection checklist, ការបោះត្រាលោហៈ tolerances guide, and អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ quality audit checklist.
Plan inventory and approval timing
អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ transfer timing is often driven by approval loops rather than stamping cycle time. Allow time for DFM review, tooling inspection or build, sample production, finishing, inspection report approval, packaging confirmation, and shipping. If the old អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ is unstable, build safety stock before the transfer if possible.
Tell the new អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ whether the first shipment is a pilot order, bridge inventory, or full release. A careful launch plan helps avoid mixing old and new revisions in the same warehouse. For launch planning, the pilot production checklist can help.
អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ transfer RFQ checklist
- Current drawing, revision level, and 3D file if available.
- Approved samples and any rejected samples that explain a known issue.
- Material grade, thickness, temper, and certificate requirement.
- Finish, plating, passivation, deburring, cleaning, and packaging notes.
- Annual volume, monthly forecast, first order quantity, and target launch date.
- Tool ownership, tool condition, maintenance history, and transfer permission.
- Inspection reports, CTQ dimensions, gauges, and required documents.
- Current pain point: cost, ពេលវេលាដឹកជញ្ជូន, capacity, quality, communication, or location.
To start a controlled review, send this package through the contact page. You can also include links to related requirements such as plating and passivation, packaging and shipping, or custom ការបោះត្រាលោហៈ.
FAQ: ការបោះត្រាលោហៈ អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ transfer
Can a stamping die be transferred to a new អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់?
Yes, if the buyer owns the tool and the die matches the new អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់’s press and maintenance capability. The tool should be inspected, repaired if needed, and trialed before production release.
What is the biggest risk in អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ transfer?
The biggest risk is unclear acceptance criteria. If the drawing, samples, and inspection plan do not match, the new អ្នកផ្គត់ផ្គង់ may quote and inspect against the wrong requirement.
Should samples be sent with the drawing?
Yes. Samples show burr direction, forming marks, finish, packaging, and real production variation that may not be clear from the drawing alone.
How can buyers avoid supply interruption during transfer?
Build a transition plan with safety stock, sample approval timing, tooling readiness, first article inspection, and clear revision control before changing the production source.

