
Cabinet Frames and Structures
Frames, bases, doors, panels, and housings need stable geometry so the cabinet platform starts from a reliable structure.
Digital Infrastructure / Server Cabinets & Cabinet Platforms
Frames, panels, doors, rails, brackets, and platform hardware where alignment, finish control, mounting features, and repeatable assembly matter.

Manufacturing Strength
Server cabinet hardware has to fit before it can function: rails need to align, doors and panels need to close cleanly, mounting points need to repeat, and finishes need to hold up through handling and assembly. Strong cabinet manufacturing keeps those details stable from first builds into repeat production.

Frames, bases, doors, panels, and housings need stable geometry so the cabinet platform starts from a reliable structure.

Rails, brackets, slots, holes, supports, and mounting points need to line up cleanly and repeat from build to build.

Door swing, panel fit, visible surfaces, coatings, and handling all affect whether the cabinet feels finished and production-ready.

Dimensional checks, interface review, finish checks, and production feedback keep cabinet details from drifting between builds.
What This Includes
Cabinet platforms bring together enclosure structure, access hardware, mounting features, and repeated mechanical interfaces. The value is keeping the hardware set consistent enough for production assembly and service access.
Rack-style housings, frames, bases, doors, panels, and related sheet-metal elements for cabinet-platform builds.
Hardware sets that combine structure, mounting features, access points, and assembly interfaces into repeatable cabinet families.
Rails, brackets, supports, fastening locations, and cable-management hardware that carry the cabinet's repeated mechanical interfaces.
Doors, side panels, covers, housings, chassis parts, and formed metal structures that define fit, access, and finish.
Typical RFQ Inputs
Share 2D drawings, 3D files, cabinet layout, rail geometry, mounting features, and key interface points.
Identify sheet-metal material, thickness, structural expectations, panel needs, and part-family variations.
Note appearance, coating, surface finish, corrosion, grounding, handling, or color requirements where relevant.
Include rails, brackets, fasteners, cable-management hardware, welding, joining, and assembly assumptions.
Provide target timing, estimated volume, inspection expectations, documentation needs, and qualification requirements.
Next Step
Send drawings, cabinet layout, materials, finishes, rail and hardware assumptions, timing, and quality expectations. Those details help the team review the manufacturing path around the real geometry and assembly needs.
