Updated: July 11, 2026. Author: TX Machinery editorial team. Technical review: final machine selection should be checked by a sales engineer against coil data, drawings and factory layout before quotation.
Buying coil processing machinery from China can work well when the buyer prepares a technical brief and compares suppliers carefully. Problems usually appear when specifications are vague, quotations are compared only by price or after-sales details are discussed too late.
Table of Contents
- Write a real technical brief
- Compare scope, not only price
- Plan FAT and shipment
- After-sales and spare parts
- FAQ
Write a Real Technical Brief Before Asking for Prices
A supplier cannot responsibly configure a cut to length line, slitting line machines, stainless steel polishing line or ERW tube mill line from a one-line request. The buyer should list material grade, thickness, width, coil weight, output target, tolerance, local power and factory layout.
A clear brief reduces misunderstandings and makes quotations easier to compare. It also helps the supplier identify when the buyer is asking for an unrealistic range, such as one low-cost line expected to handle both very thin and very thick material at high speed.
- Send material data and finished product drawings.
- Define common production sizes and occasional sizes separately.
- State acceptance criteria for flatness, burr, length, surface or weld quality.
- Share layout limits, crane capacity and power supply.

Compare Scope, Not Only the Bottom-Line Price
Two quotations for a slitting line or CTL line may include different decoilers, tooling, hydraulic parts, electrical brands, spare parts, installation support and training. A cheaper quotation may simply exclude essential items.
Review supplier background, workshop photos and similar projects. The TX Machinery page and workshop and assembly capability can help buyers understand TX Machinery capabilities before deeper technical discussion.
| Decision Point | What to Check | Why It Affects the Project |
|---|---|---|
| Machine scope | Main units, tooling, spare parts and controls | Prevents hidden extras after order |
| Acceptance test | Trial material, target speed and quality checks | Makes FAT measurable |
| Service scope | Installation, training, remote support and documentation | Reduces startup risk |
| Packing and shipment | Export packing, container plan and shipping responsibilities | Protects equipment before arrival |

Plan Factory Acceptance Testing Before Shipment
Factory acceptance testing should be linked to the buyer’s real product. If exact material is not available, agree on a realistic substitute and define what can be verified before shipment. Check mechanical movement, HMI operation, safety devices, sample quality and packing list.
FAT is not a guarantee that every future material will run perfectly, but it reduces uncertainty and gives operators a clearer commissioning baseline.
An export buyer told TX Machinery that the most useful part of FAT was seeing the operator sequence before installation, because it helped them prepare staff training at their own plant.

After-Sales Support and Spare Parts Should Be Decided Early
Installation support, online troubleshooting, electrical drawings, spare parts lists and maintenance schedules should be confirmed before shipment. Buyers should also nominate internal technicians who will own the machine after commissioning.
For a safer procurement process, send contact TX Machinery a complete brief and ask for a configuration discussion before negotiating final price.
Risk Control After the Purchase Order
After the purchase order, buyers should manage the project actively. Confirm drawings, production schedule, electrical standard, paint color, spare parts list and inspection plan. Ask for progress photos at meaningful stages such as frame machining, assembly, wiring and trial running. This keeps the project visible without micromanaging the factory.
For export projects, shipment preparation deserves the same attention as machine building. Container loading, rust prevention, wooden packing, labeling, documents and installation sequence should be reviewed before the line leaves China. When the machine arrives, the buyer should already know who will unload it, where each section will be placed and how TX Machinery support will connect during commissioning.
- Keep one approved technical specification file as the project reference.
- Use FAT results to prepare local foundation, power and operator training.
- Confirm spare parts shipment before the machine leaves the factory.
- Schedule commissioning support early, especially when local holidays or shipping delays are possible.
How to Keep the Project Documented
Good documentation protects both buyer and supplier. Keep the signed technical specification, layout drawing, electrical standard, spare parts list, FAT checklist, packing photos and commissioning notes in one project folder. When an operator or manager changes later, the project history remains clear.
For overseas buyers, documentation is also useful for customs, insurance and local installation teams. Before shipping, ask contact TX Machinery to confirm the packing list, machine section labels and unloading order so the equipment can move from container to foundation without confusion.
Useful TX Machinery Resources
Continue the comparison with these related product and company pages:
- about TX Machinery
- workshop and assembly photos
- cut to length lines
- slitting line machines
- stainless polishing line
- ERW tube mill line
- contact TX Machinery
FAQ
What is the biggest mistake when buying machinery from China?
The biggest mistake is comparing prices without a clear technical specification and without checking what each quotation includes.
Should buyers visit the factory?
A visit is helpful when possible, but buyers can also review workshop photos, videos, drawings, project references and FAT procedures.
What should be included in FAT?
FAT should check mechanical operation, controls, safety devices, sample quality, packing list and agreed acceptance criteria.
Can TX Machinery support export projects?
Yes. TX Machinery can discuss configuration, export packing, installation support and commissioning requirements for overseas buyers.

