Browse case-study style application references by industry, product line, and region, then move into selector, RFQ, or engineering contact with the right context already framed.
Compact stepper stacks for gantry, extrusion, feeder, and fine-layer positioning systems.
Higher-torque motion stacks for routers, tables, tool changers, and mid-load industrial axes.
Motion stacks for collaborative joints, feeders, positioning modules, and encoder-aware control loops.
Quiet, precise motion for diagnostics, fluid handling, positioning modules, and controlled delivery systems.
Precision motion for wafer handling, alignment, compact transfer modules, and encoder-aware subsystems.
Matched motors, gearboxes, and actuators for indexing, sealing, cutting, and synchronized line modules.
Compact motion stacks for feeders, tensioning modules, winding assists, and repetitive factory mechanisms.
Fine positioning motion for optical alignment, shutter modules, compact stages, and beam-path adjustments.
A print-farm integrator replaced mixed commodity motors with one NEMA 17 + driver stack for faster commissioning.
A pellet-fed extrusion module needed cleaner low-speed motion and better current matching.
A repeat-build 3d printing program needed a motion stack that could be quoted, validated, and serviced with fewer exceptions.
A small machine OEM consolidated one router platform around a single NEMA 23 motor and driver pair.
A manual indexing station required higher holding torque without a full cabinet redesign.
A repeat-build cnc program needed a motion stack that could be quoted, validated, and serviced with fewer exceptions.
A robotics integrator needed predictable motion for a compact feeder with limited cabinet depth.
A custom motion assembly was scoped for a robotics OEM that needed fieldbus-ready communication and brake support.
A repeat-build robotics program needed a motion stack that could be quoted, validated, and serviced with fewer exceptions.
A compact tray motion subsystem needed repeatable travel without a bulky gearbox stack.
An OEM moved from mixed local suppliers to one compact stepper platform for a fluid-delivery module.
A repeat-build medical program needed a motion stack that could be quoted, validated, and serviced with fewer exceptions.
A compact handling stage needed encoder-aware motion without growing the cabinet footprint.
An older subassembly needed stronger reliability under repeated start-stop cycles.
A repeat-build semiconductor program needed a motion stack that could be quoted, validated, and serviced with fewer exceptions.
A packaging OEM needed higher output torque without a larger motor body in the same frame space.
A stroke-defined motion module needed a simpler mechanism than a separate motor and screw assembly.
A repeat-build packaging program needed a motion stack that could be quoted, validated, and serviced with fewer exceptions.
A textile-machine service team needed a more standard motor platform for recurring feeder replacements.
A torque-limited output stage needed more pulling force without a larger cabinet footprint.
A repeat-build textile program needed a motion stack that could be quoted, validated, and serviced with fewer exceptions.
A compact positioning stage needed defined travel and lower assembly complexity.
A prototype module outgrew off-the-shelf mechanics and needed integrated engineering review.
A repeat-build photonics program needed a motion stack that could be quoted, validated, and serviced with fewer exceptions.