We reproduce parts the classic vehicle market can no longer source reliably — or at all. Turning rare, obsolete and unavailable components into viable products for structured supply.
Reverse engineering, digital reconstruction, material consideration, manufacturing selection and quality discipline — applied as one process.
We identify parts with real commercial potential, genuine market absence and a clear value case for reproduction.
We capture the geometry and logic of existing parts using scanning, measurement, reference comparison and technical interpretation.
We create accurate CAD models suitable for validation, iteration and production.
We assess materials, geometry, tolerances, function and manufacturability to define the most suitable route to reproduction.
Where appropriate, we create prototypes for dimensional, visual and functional review before release into production.
We prepare parts for the right manufacturing process according to part type, volume, technical requirements and viability.
We work towards consistency of fit, form and repeatability — credibility in this market depends on dependable execution.
Not every part should be made in the same way.
The correct production method depends on the part itself, its use case, expected demand and the required balance between fidelity, robustness, finish and cost.
Accordingly, our work may involve different manufacturing approaches depending on the project — including, but not limited to, additive processes, mould-based production and other suitable industrial methods.
Complex geometries, low volumes, rapid iteration.
Repeatable polymer parts at higher volume and finish.
Parts that simply cannot be sourced through original manufacturers or the traditional aftermarket.
Parts that affect usability, completion or restoration quality.
Parts that distributors and specialists repeatedly struggle to find.
Parts whose absence creates lost sales, delayed restorations or incomplete vehicles.
Parts that merit structured reproduction rather than improvised substitution.
Not simply to recreate an object — but to return a missing component to the market, worthy of the vehicles it serves.