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LogoCoatedMagnets

China-based manufacturer of coated magnets and magnetic assemblies for OEM and industrial buyers.

Send drawings, target pull force, and application details
[email protected]

Support for custom specifications, sample review, and export RFQ communication.

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About CoatedMagnets

CoatedMagnets is positioned as a China-based supplier for buyers who need clearer RFQ communication around coated magnets and magnetic assemblies.

Buyer-first communication

The site is now organized around the information OEM buyers and sourcing teams need first: geometry, pull force, coating choice, working environment, and quantity.

Coating and application fit

Projects often start from environment risk rather than a catalogue name. Corrosion, abrasion, painted surfaces, outdoor exposure, and installation constraints all matter.

From drawing to quotation

For custom work, the best starting point is usually a drawing, reference photo, or mating-part description instead of a near-match standard SKU.

How the Site Frames Factory Work

The public site is written to support OEM and industrial sourcing conversations, especially where specification clarity matters more than brochure-style claims.

Specification before promotion

The site leads with material, coating, dimensions, tolerance, temperature, and packing topics because those points usually control project risk.

Assembly context matters

A magnet is often only one part of a larger mount, fixture, or housing. Geometry and mating-part details are treated as first-order inputs.

Written alignment reduces rework

Clear RFQ structure, sample confirmation, and documented packing expectations reduce mistakes later in the process.

How OEM Projects Usually Move

The site is now structured around a practical project flow instead of generic marketing steps.

01

Submit the first RFQ

Share drawings, photos, size targets, pull-force expectations, and environment notes in the first email.

02

Confirm the technical path

Review geometry, coating system, temperature, and interface details before deciding whether the standard part is enough or a custom route is needed.

03

Approve sample and packing method

Use the sample stage to confirm fit, finish, handling, and packing assumptions before volume release.

04

Lock production and shipment details

Finalize quantity split, labels, carton method, and destination delivery expectations before shipment.

Quality and Delivery Checkpoints

Even without factory photography, buyers can still judge whether the project flow is disciplined by what gets checked and documented.

Dimension and tolerance review

Dimensions, thread specification, and interface fit should be reviewed against the actual mating part, not only against a generic catalogue label.

Magnet orientation and force target

Holding direction, working gap, and target force should be aligned before sample approval to avoid the wrong magnetic circuit path.

Coating appearance and edge condition

Surface finish, edge coverage, and handling wear should be checked according to the environment the magnet will actually face.

Packing method before shipment

Tray separation, polarity isolation, label format, and carton logic should be confirmed before volume release rather than after production is finished.

What Buyers Usually Clarify Before Shipment

Packing details are not a cosmetic afterthought. They affect magnetic safety, handling efficiency, and final delivery readiness.

Inner separation

Tray, divider, foam, or bag method depends on whether the part is a raw magnet, a coated assembly, or a retail-ready kit.

Outer carton logic

Carton weight split, stacking expectations, and destination handling rules should be discussed before mass packing starts.

Label and shipment notes

Part number, polarity marks, carton labels, and destination notes should be part of the release checklist, not a last-minute add-on.

Typical project inputs

  • Dimensions, tolerances, and thread details
  • Target pull force and working direction
  • Operating temperature and environment
  • Coating preference or corrosion concern
  • Sample need, quantity target, and delivery expectation
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