TL;DR:
Shorter engineering loops cut launch risk and increase net present value. Modeling a typical hardware NPI shows that moving prototype parts to on-demand CNC reduces cycle time by 30–60%, often reclaiming 10–20 days per quarter. At €250–€400 per engineering hour and a €50k–€200k/day cost of delay, the ROI is immediate.
Why speed now equals enterprise value
Hardware teams don’t just compete on cost; they compete on iteration speed. Every loop—design ► make ► test ► learn—carries two hidden line items:
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Subscribe- Cost of delay (CoD): revenue + margin you don’t realize while a feature or product waits.
- Cost of decision quality: the penalty for testing fewer options (fewer loops) and shipping suboptimal designs.
On-demand CNC attacks both by compressing the “make” leg of the loop and enabling more validated decisions per calendar month.
A simple ROI model execs can trust
We’ll use a minimal model your finance team can lift into Excel:
- Loop time (days) = CAD (D_c) + Make (D_m) + Test (D_t) + Rework (D_r)
- Loops per month = Working days / Loop time
- Cost of delay per day (CoD_d) = (Expected monthly revenue uplift × gross margin) / 30
- Savings per loop = Days saved × CoD_d
- Engineering burn avoided = Days saved × (Eng team day-rate)
Baseline inputs (edit to taste)
- CAD + test effort fixed (team capacity): D_c + D_t + D_r = 6 days
- Make (outsourced CNC) = 10 days via traditional sourcing
- On-demand CNC lead time = 4 days (same geometry, comparable tolerances)
- Working days/month = 20
- Engineering day-rate (blended): €2,800/day
- Cost of delay (CoD_d) scenario range: €50k–€200k/day
Loop time (traditional): 6 + 10 = 16 days → 1.25 loops/month
Loop time (on-demand): 6 + 4 = 10 days → 2.0 loops/month
Delta: +0.75 loops/month and 6 days saved per loop
Sensitivity: what days saved are worth to your P&L
| Scenario | Make Lead Time (days) | Loop Time (days) | Loops/Month | Days Saved/Loop | CoD €/Day | Monthly Value of Days Saved* |
| Traditional | 10 | 16 | 1.25 | — | — | — |
| On-Demand (Base) | 4 | 10 | 2.00 | 6 | 50,000 | €300,000 |
| On-Demand (Aggressive) | 3 | 9 | 2.22 | 7 | 100,000 | €700,000 |
| On-Demand (Conservative) | 5 | 11 | 1.82 | 5 | 50,000 | €250,000 |
*Monthly value of days saved ≈ (Days Saved/Loop × Loops/Month) × CoD €/Day
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What about engineering burn and quality risk?
- Engineering burn avoided: 6 days saved/loop × 1.5 loops/month × €2,800/day ≈ €25,200/month in redeployed capacity (not headcount cuts—capacity for more experiments).
- Decision-quality dividend: More loops → more design alternatives tested → reduced late-stage change orders and tooling churn. Even a single avoided tooling change (often €20k–€100k plus 2–4 weeks) dwarfs the premium for faster CNC lots.
Where on-demand CNC earns its keep
- Early EVT/DVT where geometry changes weekly: short runs, tight tolerances on critical fits.
- Supplier multi-sourcing: hedge supply risk; parallelize parts across vetted shops from a single interface.
- Bridge-to-mold plastics: mill early enclosures/internals to freeze design before committing to tooling.
- Compliance & reliability runs: repeatable CMM inspection and material certs when test data matters.
Implementation: a 30-day playbook
Week 1: Baseline. Export current loop timestamps (PO to goods received; inspection to test start). Calculate median D_m.
Week 2: Pilot. Select 3–5 parts (critical fits, standard alloys). Order via on-demand CNC with required tolerances and CMM.
Week 3: Compare. Record actual lead time, first-pass yield, rework hours. Update the sensitivity table with your CoD.
Week 4: Scale. Create a “fast lane” policy: which parts default to on-demand CNC and who signs off.
Governance guardrails
- Keep your DFM standards tight: flatness/parallelism on mating faces, true position on bolt patterns, finish only where function demands.
- Require digital traceability (lot, certs, inspection data).
- Use a vendor scorecard (lead time hit rate, FPY, PPV vs. quote) reviewed monthly.
Objections you’ll hear (and how to answer)
- “We can squeeze our current supplier instead.”
Squeezing a single supplier doesn’t parallelize risk or increase loop count. The ROI driver is validated loops per month, not a 5% unit-price tweak. - “Engineering is the bottleneck, not machining.”
Great—free 6 days from the make step and the same team can run more experiments. The constraint becomes throughput of learning, not spindle hours. - “Tight tolerances will kill lead time.”
For most prototypes, tolerances that matter are localized (flatness, position, runout on critical fits). Specify only what function requires; the right partner will hit them with documented inspection.
Executive checklist (paste-ready)
- Compute CoD/day for this program.
- Baseline current D_m (make lead time) and loops/month.
- Pilot 3–5 parts via on-demand CNC; collect actual lead time & FPY.
- Update the sensitivity table; review the BoFu partner short-list.
- Institutionalize a fast lane policy and a vendor scorecard.
CNC for Faster Engineering FAQ’s
Q1: How do I estimate the cost of delay for a hardware program?
Combine forecast revenue uplift with gross margin, then divide by 30 to get €/day. Include avoided penalties or contract milestones if relevant.
Q2: What if my bottleneck is test lab availability?
You still benefit. Shorter make time backfills lab cancellations and allows parallel test queues, reducing idle time.
Q3: Isn’t on-demand CNC more expensive per unit?
Sometimes—yet the system ROI comes from earlier revenue and fewer late-stage changes. Model it; the sensitivity table makes the trade explicit.
Q4: Which parts are best for the pilot?
Tight-tolerance fits, interfaces that drive assembly risk, and parts whose geometry is still changing (high information value per loop).
Q5: How do I ensure quality at higher speed?
Specify critical GD&T, request CMM reports for those features, and standardize materials/finishes. Use a vendor scorecard to enforce consistency.





































