This page explains the representative process used when buyers send non-standard cooling-parts requests, old samples, basic drawings or custom structure questions. It is a typical workflow page, not a single customer project report.
Most cooling-parts inquiries are standard matching jobs, but some buyers need help with non-standard structures, rebuild situations, sample-based comparison or a part that does not fit a simple catalog path.
In those cases, the first step is not a fast generic quotation. The first step is collecting enough reference information to judge feasibility correctly.
Custom or mold-related discussion only becomes useful when the input references are clear enough to evaluate.
Clear photos, dimensions, drawings and old samples help reduce wrong assumptions early.
Vehicle type, engine, use scenario or repair context often explain why the request is non-standard.
Trial quantity and longer-term volume affect how the discussion should move forward.
Feasibility review should happen before larger production or shipment planning discussion.
The steps below describe a representative workflow for mold or non-standard cooling-parts discussion.
Buyers send available references such as old part photos, sketches, OEM numbers or simple structure notes.
The request is checked to see whether the information is sufficient and whether the structure can be discussed practically.
Open points such as dimensions, outlet positions, quantity target or sample needs are discussed before moving ahead.
Once the request path is clearer, sample confirmation and later order handoff can move forward more safely.
Most delay comes from incomplete input, not from the idea of customization itself.
Front, side and connection-area photos usually help much more than one distant image.
Even a simple handwritten size note can reduce confusion around structure and fit.
Say whether this is for repair, rebuilding, market testing or a repeated aftermarket need.
Trial quantity and future order expectation help set a more realistic discussion path.
These are the practical questions buyers usually ask before sending samples or drawings.
No. A clear old sample photo, rough sketch, OEM number or basic dimension note can still be enough to begin feasibility review.
Yes. Photos can start the process, especially when they include several angles and visible structure details.
No. It is a representative workflow page designed to explain how custom-request discussion typically starts and moves forward.
Yes. Some buyers review a custom item while also sourcing standard radiator tanks, caps, flanges or related cooling parts.
Send your sample photos, drawing, OEM number, dimensions and expected quantity. We will review the request and reply with practical next steps.