Our principles

1
We don’t change the machine’s design
Every machine was engineered to work a certain way. Our job is to restore that, not reinvent it.
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We repair and adjust machines to match the original intent of the manufacturer.
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We avoid “creative” modifications that may look clever but cause new problems later.
- If a previous owner or shop has already modified the machine in a risky way, we’ll point it out and recommend bringing it back to a safe, sensible configuration.
If we ever believe a design-related change is truly beneficial (for example, a known OEM update or safety improvement), we’ll explain it clearly and only proceed with your agreement.
2
Safety first
No repair is worth it if it’s unsafe.
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We do not perform repairs that would compromise electrical safety, guarding, dust extraction, or braking.
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If a machine cannot be made safe without major work, we’ll tell you honestly even if that means advising against repair.
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We check for things like exposed wires, damaged plugs, missing guards, bad switches, and unsafe DIY fixes and flag them immediately.
Your crew should be able to plug in a machine and work with confidence. That’s our starting point.
3
Genuine parts or clearly better substitutes
Parts matter. Cheap or wrong components can destroy a good machine.
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We use genuine spare parts wherever they’re available and make sense.
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When originals are discontinued or unreasonably expensive, we select high-quality substitutes that match or exceed the original spec (material, rating, precision).
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We will tell you when a part is not OEM and explain why we chose the replacement.
You’ll never have to guess what went into your machine or worry that we cut corners on critical components.
4
We never reduce efficiency or reliability
A repair that makes a machine weaker or less reliable is not a real repair.
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We don’t “fix” a machine by detuning it, removing functionality, or masking a symptom.
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If a quick, cheap fix would cause lower power, rougher finish, overheating, or chronic breakdowns, we’ll tell you and offer better options.
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Where possible, we aim to improve consistency and uptime compared to the condition the machine arrived in (for example, better alignment, less vibration, cleaner wiring).
If keeping performance and reliability means recommending an overhaul or even replacement, we’ll say that openly instead of patching it just to get it out the door.
5
Efficient and open communication
No surprises, no black box.
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Before we start major work, you get a clear estimate and a simple explanation of what we found.
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If we discover additional issues that affect cost, safety, or reliability, we update you first, not after the fact.
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We’ll explain your options in plain language:
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“Minimum to get it running”
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“Recommended for reliability”
- “Not worth fixing—consider replacement”
We want you to understand what happened to your machine, what we did, and what you can expect from it going forward
6
Justified and agreed change in the scope of work
Sometimes the work we do on your machine ends up being different from what we first expected. We know that’s sensitive because it often affects both time and cost, so we want you to understand why this happens and how we handle it.
Typical reasons the scope can change:
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Hidden damage.
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Safety findings.
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Parts availability.
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Test results under load.
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Previous repairs or modifications.
How we deal with scope changes:
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We pause before doing extra work that affects the price.
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We explain what we found in simple terms and why it matters for safety, performance, or reliability.
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We give you clear options and updated estimates, including the option to stop or reconsider if the repair no longer makes economic sense.
Our equipment and inventory

Electrical measurement tools
We have the means to measure the electrical parameters of machines to obtain complete information about the technical condition of its electrical subsystem.

Mechanical tools
We always have a full range of all necessary tools for carrying out repair work.
We can handle repairs of any complexity, from the simplest to the most complex.

Lathe, milling, drilling, and grinding machines
Turning, milling and drilling equipment is used to manufacture non-standard parts or spare parts for obsolete machines.

Optimized inventory
We optimize our spare parts inventory for repairs based on failure statistics for various equipment models. This reduces repair time, costs, and ultimately improves repair quality.

Mechanical measurement tools
Without high-precision mechanical measurement equipment, it's impossible to perform high-quality repairs. We have all the necessary tools for performing mechanical measurements.
