To quote single crystal turbine blade castings, NewayAeroTech needs the drawing package, alloy grade, quantity, inspection requirements, and the expected supply scope. The RFQ should make clear whether the buyer needs a casting blank, a semi-finished blade, or a finished component with EDM, CNC machining, heat treatment, coating preparation, and inspection records.
For single crystal blade work, vague terms such as "casting blades" or "superalloy blade" are not enough. A practical quotation starts with the service route, usually single crystal turbine blade casting, and then connects material, geometry, process steps, and acceptance evidence.
The first group of data is geometric: 2D drawing, 3D model, drawing revision, critical dimensions, datum structure, and any sample or previous manufacturing note. Blade airfoil shape, root details, platform features, cooling passages, and sealing surfaces can change tooling, casting risk, machining allowance, and CMM inspection strategy.
The second group is material and process data: CMSX-4, CMSX-10, Rene N5, heat treatment condition, HIP requirement, coating expectation, and whether superalloy post-processing is included. These details decide whether the quote covers only the casting route or a broader finished-part supply scope.
RFQ Field | What to Send | Why It Affects the Quote |
|---|---|---|
Geometry | 2D drawing, 3D model, revision, sample photos | Defines tooling, allowance, datum transfer, and machining scope |
Material | Alloy grade, specification, certificate need | Controls casting route, heat treatment, and acceptance evidence |
Supply scope | Blank, semi-finished, or finished blade | Separates casting price from EDM, CNC, coating, and inspection responsibility |
Inspection | FPI, X-ray, CMM, metallography, mechanical tests if required | Prevents hidden quality cost and unclear acceptance |
Commercial data | Quantity, target schedule, project stage, delivery documents | Helps compare prototype, pilot, and repeat production routes |
It is also useful to state the project stage. Prototype, pilot, urgent replacement, and repeat production orders can require different tooling discussion, sample approval, inspection frequency, and delivery documents.
If the buyer has only a sample, the RFQ should explain whether the sample is for reference, reverse engineering, or acceptance comparison. That prevents the sample from replacing formal drawing and specification control.
NewayAeroTech reviews the RFQ as a custom manufacturing package, not as a standard OEM spare-part inquiry. We review drawings, samples, specifications, and engineering requirements to decide whether a manufacturing route is feasible and what information is still missing.
Send the full RFQ package with drawings, material grade, quantity, inspection scope, and application background. NewayAeroTech can then review the single crystal casting route, identify process or inspection risks, and suggest the next engineering step based on the customer requirement.
The quote should remain conditional when drawing revision, alloy requirement, or inspection standard is missing. This keeps the answer practical and avoids unsupported assumptions on critical turbine components.
A concise RFQ is acceptable, but it should name the controlled requirements clearly. That is usually enough for NewayAeroTech to decide which questions need follow-up before pricing. It also keeps early budget review tied to real manufacturing scope and documented acceptance expectations.