
Product overview
This page covers coffee grinder burr components for coffee equipment, kitchenware, household appliances, and related consumer equipment. Buyers usually need more than a catalog name: they need to know whether the supplier can review the part geometry, material, functional surfaces, and finish before committing to tooling or production.
For new OEM programs, SINTS reviews the drawing, annual quantity, working surface, visible surface, and packaging expectation so the route is matched to the real part instead of a generic process label.
Typical applications
- coffee grinder head burrs
- grinder cutting assemblies
- stainless beverage equipment parts
- replacement burr components
Materials, process, and finish
Why the process fits
MIM can be a practical route for compact stainless or alloy appliance parts with shaped details, cutting features, curved surfaces, or repeat-volume needs. Powder metallurgy may also be reviewed for gears and selected structural parts where volume, material, and tooth geometry support the route.
The best route should be confirmed by drawing review. Burrs, cutters, gears, handles, and household fittings each have different wear, finish, and dimensional priorities.
Project support
Useful RFQ details include 2D or 3D drawings, target material, annual volume, finish requirement, working or cutting surfaces, food-contact or corrosion notes if relevant, and packaging requirements.
SINTS can support manufacturability discussion, sample review, finishing review, inspection focus, and repeat-production planning for coffee, appliance, and household component programs.
Related household products
Useful RFQ details
Send the part drawing, material target, finish requirement, expected annual volume, and notes about cutting, sliding, visible, or contact surfaces. For coffee and kitchen equipment parts, identify any surface that affects wear, corrosion, cleaning, or final assembly.
