Clarify the drawing package
A useful RFQ drawing should show length, diameter, thread, end fittings, mounting interface, bend zone and cable-routing needs.

Custom gooseneck tubing and flexible arm manufacturing support for RFQ-driven B2B buyers.
Procurement value
A useful RFQ drawing should show length, diameter, thread, end fittings, mounting interface, bend zone and cable-routing needs.
Procurement teams should describe the supported weight, arm position, adjustment frequency and expected holding force for the final product.
Define how samples will be checked: stiffness, rebound, finish, thread fit, assembly fit, packing and documentation.
Specification clarity
Clear technical inputs help reduce quotation delays, prevent sample misunderstandings and create a documented basis for repeat production.
Sample to production
Share length, outside diameter, bend holding force, thread type, cable routing, surface finish, packaging and target annual quantity.
Samples help procurement teams validate stiffness, repeatable positioning, finish, assembly fit and application safety before bulk orders.
Production can be aligned with inspection points, cartons, labels, batch records and shipping documents for USA, Canada, Europe and Australia.
Buyer questions
A dimensional drawing with overall length, diameter, thread or fitting details, mounting interface and cable-routing needs is the best starting point.
Yes. A reference sample, application photo, key dimensions and required stiffness can start the review before a formal drawing is finalized.
Length, diameter, stiffness, finish, end fittings, cable routing, tooling needs, packaging, quantity and inspection requirements all affect quotation scope.
Define the checks for holding force, bending feel, finish, thread fit, assembly fit, packing and any required documentation before bulk order release.
Quantity, annual demand and destination market help the supplier evaluate MOQ, production planning, packaging and export communication requirements.
Next sourcing step