About ncKraft

A practical technical partner for parts, products, and purpose-built systems.

ncKraft combines research, product-development judgment, in-house prototyping, and manufacturing—scaling from one defined task to multidisciplinary products and equipment.

The mission

Help useful ideas and difficult technical problems become practical solutions.

Some customers need one CAD model or machined component. Others need help developing a product or connecting mechanical, electronic, data, and software elements.

ncKraft fills that space with practical technical judgment, flexible prototyping, hands-on manufacturing, and clear communication. The objective is not to make every project larger. It is to understand the result, define the right scope, and execute the next useful step responsibly.

Work is performed in Michigan by a veteran-owned small business, with primary capabilities kept in-house whenever practical.

IMAGE PLACEHOLDER · 1400 × 900 PX · CROP 14:9

Suggested image

Authentic environmental portrait of the founder working in the Michigan shop; include tools or an active assembly and avoid staged stock-photo styling.

Service boundaries

Technical capability, clearly defined.

ncKraft provides technical research, design assistance, CAD modeling, prototyping, three-axis machining, small-batch production, and selected integrated product and equipment development involving assembly design, custom hardware, sensing, electronics, data acquisition, controls, and software.

Multidisciplinary projects are evaluated individually based on interfaces, risk, validation needs, schedule, and available resources. ncKraft is not a licensed professional engineering firm and does not provide stamped or sealed plans, regulatory or code-compliance certification, approval of regulated system modifications, or approval of safety-critical designs. Projects requiring those services must be reviewed and approved by the appropriate licensed or authorized professional.

Working principles

Be direct

Communicate constraints, risks, and tradeoffs early enough to be useful.

Build practically

Choose processes and specifications that serve the real goal of the project.

Learn quickly

Use prototypes and staged decisions to reduce uncertainty before committing resources.

Own the outcome

Keep accountability close to the person reviewing and completing the work.

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