Manufacturing & Assembly in Amarillo, TX
Production-run fabrication and contract assembly services for steel components — consistent batch after batch, built in our Amarillo shop.
Homerun Fabrication provides production manufacturing and contract assembly services in Amarillo, TX and across the Texas Panhandle. Manufacturing and assembly is what you need when a single custom part needs to become twelve, or a hundred, or a thousand — all built to the same spec, all built right. For steel components and weldments, that means a shop with the welding capacity, material handling, and assembly space to run repeatable production without the part-to-part variation that breaks downstream tolerances.
We run production batches and contract assembly for ag suppliers, commercial customers, and industrial operators since 2008 — the same shop that builds steel buildings runs the fabrication line.
Production Capacity, Without the Vendor Hassle
Most steel manufacturing customers in West Texas are stuck choosing between a one-man weld shop that can't run volume and a large industrial vendor that won't take orders under a certain size. Homerun Fabrication sits in the middle: we have the shop space, the welding equipment, and the crew to run production batches, but we're small enough to take orders that don't justify a national vendor.
That means consistent parts, written quotes, real delivery dates, and a phone you can call when you need to talk to the person actually building your work.
What does a production run look like?
A typical production job starts with the customer's drawings or a prototype we built earlier. We quote unit cost and lead time, set up the fabrication and welding stations for that part, and run the batch with consistent fixturing so the parts come out matching one another. From there it's quality check, optional finishing or paint, packaging, and either pickup at the shop or delivery within our service area.
Manufacturing Capabilities
What we can run in batch.
Repeat Weldments
Multi-part welded assemblies built to consistent spec across batch runs.
Steel Components
Brackets, mounts, frames, and structural components in repeatable production volume.
Contract Assembly
Assembly of customer-supplied parts with welding and fabrication capacity in-house.
Pre-Production Pilots
Pilot batches to confirm tooling, fixturing, and process before scaling to volume.
Recurring Orders
Standing orders for parts on a regular schedule, sized to your inventory needs.
Delivery in Service Area
Pickup at the shop or delivery within our 80-mile service radius from Amarillo.
From Prototype to Production
One of the practical advantages of running a shop that does prototyping, custom fabrication, and production under one roof is the handoff — or rather, the lack of one. A prototype we built last month doesn't get shipped to a different vendor when it's time to scale. The same crew that ironed out the weld sequence on the first piece runs the production batch on the next fifty.
That continuity means fewer surprises, faster ramp-up, and parts that come out of the production run looking like the prototype that worked.
Production Run Process
1. Drawings & Quote
Customer drawings or prototype, written unit cost, and a delivery schedule.
2. Fixture & Setup
Shop fixturing built for the part to keep tolerances consistent across the batch.
3. Run the Batch
Production fabrication and welding with quality checks throughout the run.
4. Deliver
Final inspection, optional finishing, packaging, and pickup or delivery.
How do you keep parts consistent across a production run?
Consistency comes from fixturing. Before we run a batch, we build a shop fixture or jig that holds the part in the same position for every weld — same setback, same alignment, same tack sequence. That keeps tolerances tight across 12 units or 200, and it's what separates a production shop from a one-off welder. Quality checks happen throughout the run, not just at the end.
Need Parts in Volume?
Send us the drawings or the prototype — we'll quote the run.
Manufacturing & Assembly FAQs
What batch sizes do you handle for production runs?
Do you assemble parts you didn't manufacture?
Can you scale a prototype into a production run?
Last Updated: April 2026
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Run the Batch in Amarillo
Production capacity, consistent parts, and a phone you can call.