@karol_flores_12:

K@rº
K@rº
Open In TikTok:
Region: UY
Friday 31 January 2025 00:09:38 GMT
2330
168
0
0

Music

Download

Comments

There are no more comments for this video.
To see more videos from user @karol_flores_12, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Quoting Machine Shop Work Machining is complex, quoting can be daunting. Here is some information on how I handle quoting projects from small to large. Shop Rate-You need to determine how much per hour to charge. This rate should be the amount you would have to pay monthly on the machine you plan to use, broken down into an hourly rate, plus overhead. Overhead includes the cost of health care, electricity, employee salaries, consumables like cutters and fluids, and much more. A Tormach will not command the same rate as a 5 axis Okuma. Each has work that it is best suited to. Try to fit the work to the best machine for the job. Example: $3,000 monthly machine payment with $5,000 in additional overhead(add up every single bill no matter how small.) $8,000 x 12 monthly payments equals $96,000 total. Now let's assume you work 8 hours a day, 5 days a week, 4 weeks a month, 12 months a year. 8*5=40 hours per week. 40 hours * 4 weeks = 160 hours per month. 160 hours * 12 months =1,920 working hours in which you can make your machine payment. $96,000 ÷ 1,920 = $50.00 per hour to break even. Now you need to make some sort of profit. 15% to 25% is an honest amount. $50.00 + 25% = $62.50 per hour. If your total overhead is far greater the hourly rate will also have to be far greater. Additional overhead like paying for a building can easily require your hourly rate to be much higher. Having multiple machines running or automating processes can increase this profit margin significantly without charging an unreasonable amount. This is why Education and embracing technology is paramount. Now that you have determined Shop rate, let's focus on some key aspects of any quote. Materials - Programming rate - Scope of Work - One time purchases - Best fit - Packaging and Shipping - Research - Risk Assessment - Quality Control - Estimated Delivery Date - Quantity - Cushion - Stepping Back to see the Whole Picture -  Customer Relations -  The Full article is available on our website, link in bio. 👍
Quoting Machine Shop Work Machining is complex, quoting can be daunting. Here is some information on how I handle quoting projects from small to large. Shop Rate-You need to determine how much per hour to charge. This rate should be the amount you would have to pay monthly on the machine you plan to use, broken down into an hourly rate, plus overhead. Overhead includes the cost of health care, electricity, employee salaries, consumables like cutters and fluids, and much more. A Tormach will not command the same rate as a 5 axis Okuma. Each has work that it is best suited to. Try to fit the work to the best machine for the job. Example: $3,000 monthly machine payment with $5,000 in additional overhead(add up every single bill no matter how small.) $8,000 x 12 monthly payments equals $96,000 total. Now let's assume you work 8 hours a day, 5 days a week, 4 weeks a month, 12 months a year. 8*5=40 hours per week. 40 hours * 4 weeks = 160 hours per month. 160 hours * 12 months =1,920 working hours in which you can make your machine payment. $96,000 ÷ 1,920 = $50.00 per hour to break even. Now you need to make some sort of profit. 15% to 25% is an honest amount. $50.00 + 25% = $62.50 per hour. If your total overhead is far greater the hourly rate will also have to be far greater. Additional overhead like paying for a building can easily require your hourly rate to be much higher. Having multiple machines running or automating processes can increase this profit margin significantly without charging an unreasonable amount. This is why Education and embracing technology is paramount. Now that you have determined Shop rate, let's focus on some key aspects of any quote. Materials - Programming rate - Scope of Work - One time purchases - Best fit - Packaging and Shipping - Research - Risk Assessment - Quality Control - Estimated Delivery Date - Quantity - Cushion - Stepping Back to see the Whole Picture -  Customer Relations -  The Full article is available on our website, link in bio. 👍

About