Sketch to Part in 5-15 Days/ One Piece Up/ No Tooling, No NRE
// 05 — Service

Prototyping & low-volume machining for engineers iterating on hardware.

From a sketch on the back of a notebook, a worn-out sample, or a CAD model — to a real, machined working part in 5-15 days. No tooling, no NRE, no minimum order. Iterate as many times as you need to land the design.

Send what you've got → How it works
5-15dSketch to part
1+Minimum quantity
$0Tooling cost
2-3×Typical revisions
// What this is

A working machine shop set up to iterate.

Most prototype shops are really production shops with a slow lane bolted on. We're built the other way — small batches and one-offs are the everyday work, with bigger production runs scheduled around them.

That means we don't need a Class-A drawing pack to start. A sketch with the critical dimensions, a photo of a worn sample, or a half-finished CAD model is enough. We measure, model in Fusion 360 or SolidWorks if needed, and machine the first piece. You hold it, find the issues, mark up the changes, and we cut the next revision.

No tooling charges. No NRE. No minimum order. Each revision is quoted from the diff — what changed, what stays — so iterations stay cheap. Most prototype designs land at the third or fourth piece.

Good fits for prototyping at Enex

  • Replacement parts for OEM-obsolete equipment — sample to drawing to working part
  • R&D mechanical hardware — fixturing, brackets, custom housings
  • Pre-production first articles — 1-20 pieces ahead of design freeze
  • Improvement iterations — taking an existing part and machining a better version
  • Fit-check & visual prototypes — typically aluminium or acetal for speed
  • Field-trial samples for mining and oil & gas operators

Less good fits

  • 3D-printed plastic prototypes (we partner one out, but it's not our shop)
  • Sub-100µm tolerance parts (we'd suggest a tool & die specialist)
  • Architectural / aesthetic-finish prototypes (industrial finish only)
// 03 — Process

Sketch in. Working part out. 5-15 days.

A typical first-article prototype follows this rhythm. Multi-revision jobs loop steps 03-04 until the design is right.

// 01 · Day 0

Send what you've got

Sketch, photo, sample, half-baked CAD, full drawing — anything. Email or upload via the quote form. The engineer who'll machine it reads it that day.

Day 0
// 02 · Day 1-2

Quote & clarify

Quote in 24-48 hours. If a dimension is missing or the GD&T conflicts, we phone before quoting — usually solves it in five minutes.

Day 1-2
// 03 · Day 3-12

Machine the first piece

Material sourced for the build (typically 1-5 working days, longer for specialist grades). Turn, mill, EDM. Photos at fixturing, after first cut, and at completion.

Day 3-12
// 04 · Day 12-15

Hand it over & iterate

You hold the part. Mark up the changes. We re-quote the diff and cut the next revision — typically 3-7 days for a single-feature change.

Day 12-15
// 04 — Send what you've got

No drawing? No problem.

Most prototype jobs don't start with a perfect drawing pack. Here's what's actually useful, ranked by how fast we can quote from it.

STEP / IGES file

  • Critical dimensions called out
  • Tolerances on bearing surfaces and ports
  • Material spec or "best for the job"
  • Quantity (we'll quote 1 + 5 + 10 if you want a curve)

2D drawing (PDF / DWG / DXF)

  • Fully dimensioned with title block
  • Material spec, finish callouts
  • Tolerances or "use shop standard ±0.1mm"

Worn sample + measurements

  • Post or drop the sample at Malaga
  • Photos with a tape or caliper for scale
  • Note which surfaces are critical / wear
  • We measure, draw, machine — typical adds 2-3 days

Sketch on paper

  • Critical dimensions called out (ø, length, thread, key features)
  • Note what fits to what
  • Material grade or duty (load, wear, corrosion, temp)
  • Best for simple parts — pins, bushings, brackets, plates
// 05 — Material decision

Prototype in production material — or in something faster?

Two camps of prototype, two right answers. Most jobs sit in one or the other.

Prototype goalRecommended materialWhyTypical cost vs. final
Fit check / visual reviewAluminium 6061 or acetalCuts ~3× faster than steel, no heat treat, easy revisions~30-50% of final-part cost
Working load / wear testProduction grade — 4140, 316SS, bronzeBehaves like the real part. No surprises in the field trial.~80-100% of final-part cost
Reverse-engineered replacementMatch original spec from sampleOEM material if known; reverse-spec from hardness + visual otherwise~120% (single-piece premium)
First-article ahead of productionProduction grade — exact specConfirms drawing, cycle time and material before tooling-up larger runQuoted as 1-piece prototype
Engineering plastic partAcetal, nylon, UHMWPE, PTFEMachined from plate or rod — same shop floor as steel~60-80% of final-part cost
// 07 — FAQ

Frequently asked

Can I send a sketch instead of a drawing?

Yes. A hand sketch with the critical dimensions, a photo with measurements, or a worn sample is all most prototype jobs need. We model in CAD if it helps the conversation, or work straight from the sketch on simple parts.

How fast can you turn around a prototype?

Simple turned or milled parts in common materials: 5-7 working days from approval. Multi-feature prototypes with reverse engineering or specialist materials: 10-15 working days. Express turnaround available where the schedule allows, typically 30-50% premium.

What's the minimum order for a prototype?

One part. Most prototype jobs are between 1 and 10 pieces. Larger first-article runs (20-50 pieces) are common ahead of design freeze for production.

Can you handle a design that's still changing?

Yes — that's the normal mode. We expect 2-3 revisions on a typical prototype. Each revision is quoted from the diff, not from scratch, so iterations stay cheap.

Do you do plastic prototypes?

We machine acetal, nylon, UHMWPE and PTFE for engineering plastic parts. For 3D-printed plastic prototypes (FDM, SLS) we partner with a Perth print shop and quote that work alongside the machined parts.

What materials are best for a working prototype vs. a final part?

If the prototype needs to bear load or wear like the production part, machine in the production grade — 4140, 316SS, bronze, etc. If it's just for fit-check or visual review, aluminium 6061 or acetal cuts faster and cheaper. We'll advise at quote stage.

// 08 — Related

Adjacent services

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