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Essential Tips on How to Reduce Cost in Structural Steel Fabrication

Blog | February 14th, 2018

Market costs fluctuate in the steel fabrication sector. Left in the hands of an unprincipled factory shop owner, those market fluctuations yield shoddy products. As any engineer knows all too well, a structural steel component cannot be compromised, not in any way whatsoever. With this knowledge firmly in mind, how does a diligent factory shop smooth such quality-impacting ripples before they jeopardize the fabrication process?

Apply A Communications Blueprint 

With the work order in hand, a suitable lead time is essential. In other words, the responsible party shouldn’t be stuck with a time crunch. If deadlines are common, there’s no time to shop amongst a favourite group of material suppliers. Sure, successfully quashed time limits garner feathers in caps, but they also push costs sky-high. Collect that purchase order, make time for the ordering work, and use that time to make the best possible material acquisitions.

Tabulate the Process 

Down on the factory floor, the fabrication operations are generating noise. Pull away from the distraction, pick up the computer keyboard, and start drafting a plan. This is logistics-based work, but it’s not the kind of task that can be left to any old computer user. Equipped with engineering smarts, the planner starts compiling a material orders table. The weight of the structural steel and the grading codes stamped on those sourced alloys matches a quoted price, as stated by the selected supplier. Fill the cells of the table with quantities, piece lengths, and any other relevant data. Written down like this, all costs become immediately clear.

Utilize On-Site and Off-Site Adaptability 

What we’ve got so far is enough time to plan the material choices and fabrication methods. The shipping costs and material specs are all listed on that tabulated form, and an initial estimation of expenditure has been drafted. From here, we carry out the structural engineering process in-house. The environment is managed here, tools are on hand, and a partial assembly operation is underway. Taken as far as possible, to the point that the structural frame pieces are ready for transportation, any man-hours spent in the field are effectively reduced.

Take a step back from the planning process. The goal is to streamline the operation but still have enough project time to properly source the materials. After those materials are intelligently and judiciously sourced, the pre-fabrication work gives way to the actual production operation. Conducted in-house, the financial bottom line grows wide. Then, as the fabricated load proceeds to the installation site, the field work commences. This stage stays short but extremely productive.

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