Aerospace CNC Machining Vietnam — 5-Axis, GD&T-Verified, Full FAI Package

Aerospace CNC Machining Vietnam — AS9100-Aware, GD&T-Verified | VNcontX
CNC Machining · Aerospace

Aerospace CNC Machining Vietnam — 5-Axis, GD&T-Verified, Full FAI Package


Based on DFM reviews across 200+ aerospace part numbers — structural brackets in 7075-T651, actuator housings in 17-4 PH, engine mount fittings in Ti-6Al-4V — the failure mode we see most often is not a machining problem. It’s a documentation gap. Parts land at incoming inspection, dimensions check out, and the order still stalls because the FAI balloon references don’t match the drawing rev, or the mill cert is missing a heat number. This article covers how VNcontX eliminates that gap: the aerospace CNC machining workflow, the documentation stack, and the specific technical requirements that separate an aerospace shop from a general job shop.

Aerospace CNC machining Vietnam — complex aluminum housing multi-axis compound geometry threaded ports VNcontX HCMC
±0.003mm Precision tolerance
5-Axis DMG Mori simultaneous
100% CMM FAI every order
Cpk ≥1.67 Process capability

Why Aerospace CNC Machining Is a Different Conversation

General CNC shops quote to drawing. Aerospace CNC machining requires the shop to read the intent behind the drawing — then hold it across 50, 500, or 5,000 identical parts. The difference shows up in four areas buyers consistently flag:

  • GD&T interpretation: True position, perpendicularity, and profile-of-a-surface callouts require CMM programming — not calipers. If the shop can’t load your STEP file into Zeiss Calypso and generate a balloon-referenced CMM report, it’s not an aerospace shop.
  • Thin-wall stability: Aerospace brackets and structural ribs in 7075-T6 or Ti-6Al-4V routinely drop to 0.5–0.8mm wall sections. Fixture strategy and tool path sequencing determine whether the part springs or stays flat. This requires 5-axis simultaneous machining, not 3+2 positioning.
  • Material traceability: The mill cert travels with the part. EN 9102 First Article, PPAP Level 3, or a customer-specific FAI format — the documentation package is not optional. It gets audited.
  • Surface finish class: Ra 0.8μm is standard. Flight-critical bore surfaces often demand Ra 0.4μm or better. That requires CBN finishing passes, verified with surface profilometry — not visual inspection.

VNcontX operates with this context. Every CNC machining aerospace order runs through the Zero-Defect Protocol: DFM review before cutting, in-process SPC, and 100% CMM final inspection with a traceable report attached to the shipping documentation.

Aerospace Materials — Grades, Challenges, and What We Machine

Material selection in CNC machining for aerospace is not interchangeable. Each alloy behaves differently under cutting loads, and the machining parameters that work for 6061-T6 will destroy a Ti-6Al-4V part. Below is the aerospace-grade material set we work with regularly, and the specific challenges each presents.

Material Grade Aerospace Application Key Machining Challenge
Aluminum 7075-T6 / 7075-T651 Structural frames, ribs, brackets Residual stress — parts spring after roughing. Requires stabilization cycle before finish pass.
Titanium Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V) / Grade 23 Fastener holes, structural fittings, engine mounts Work-hardening and heat generation. Low SFM, high-pressure coolant mandatory. Tool life closely monitored.
Stainless Steel 17-4 PH (H900/H1025) / 316L Actuator components, fluid system fittings 17-4 PH work-hardens rapidly. Precipitation hardening must occur before final machining of critical dimensions.
Steel 4340 / 4140 (normalized or HT) Landing gear components, drive shafts High hardness after heat treatment (up to 52 HRC). Requires CBN inserts for finish passes.

Material cert requirement: All aerospace-grade stock arrives with mill certs (heat/lot traceable). Certs are retained on file and attached to the FAI package. If a customer requires an independent material verification (PMI or spectrometer check), this is performed at VNcontX before cutting begins.

5-Axis Simultaneous Machining for Complex Aerospace Geometry

The standard argument for 5-axis CNC machining in aerospace is fewer setups, better surface finish, and consistent datum control. All of that is true — but the real value for aerospace work is positional accuracy across multiple features in a single clamping.

When you machine a titanium structural fitting with three bolt-hole patterns at different compound angles, the true position of each pattern relative to the datum A-B-C scheme is what the CMM will measure against. Every re-clamp introduces uncertainty. Five-axis simultaneous eliminates that uncertainty for most complex geometries.

At VNcontX, the DMG Mori 5-axis platform holds:

  • Linear positioning accuracy: ±0.002mm (machine calibrated quarterly)
  • Circular interpolation: ±0.003mm on 100mm radius test arc
  • Spindle thermal compensation: active during long-cycle titanium programs
  • Tool length measurement: on-machine Renishaw probe before each finish tool engagement

For cnc machining aerospace parts requiring ±0.005mm standard or ±0.003mm precision tolerance, all final dimensions are verified by Zeiss Contura CMM using Calypso software. The CMM report maps directly to the drawing balloon numbers.

CMM inspection aerospace CNC machined parts Vietnam — dimensional verification GD&T true position VNcontX HCMC

FAI and Documentation — What the Package Includes

An aerospace buyer’s first question about any offshore CNC machining service is never “how cheap?” — it’s “what do I get when the parts arrive?” Documentation is the answer. Without it, parts sit in incoming inspection indefinitely.

Every VNcontX aerospace order ships with a standard documentation package. Customer-specific formats (AS9102B FAI, PPAP Level 3, or proprietary forms) are supported on request.

Document Standard Included Notes
CMM Dimensional Report Yes — 100% of parts Balloon-referenced to customer drawing. Zeiss Calypso output. PDF + native file available.
Material Certificate Yes — heat/lot traceable Mill cert forwarded. PMI/spectrometer on request.
Surface Finish Report Yes — Ra value per callout Mitutoyo SJ-210 profilometer. Critical surfaces measured and recorded.
First Article Inspection (FAI) Yes — every new part number AS9102B format on request. Includes ballooned drawing, dimensional data, material cert, finish data.
Certificate of Conformance (CoC) Yes Signed, dated, references drawing rev, material, finish spec, and applicable standards.
Process Control Records Yes — in-process SPC data Cpk/Ppk data on critical dimensions for production runs.

AS9100 status: VNcontX operates under ISO 9001:2015 with AS9100-aware process discipline. Full AS9100 Rev D certification is in scope for 2026 Q4. Buyers operating under AS9100-registered supply chain requirements should confirm applicability with their quality team before order placement.

Surface Finishing for Aerospace-Grade Parts

Dimensional accuracy and surface finish are separate conformance gates. A part can be geometrically perfect and fail on corrosion protection or surface fatigue requirements. VNcontX processes the full aerospace finishing spectrum in-house or through Verified Partner finishing shops operating under the same Zero-Defect Protocol:

  • Anodize Type II & III (MIL-A-8625F): Class 1 (undyed) and Class 2 (dyed). Hard anodize (Type III) for wear surfaces. Thickness per spec, verified by eddy-current gauge.
  • Passivation (ASTM A967 / AMS 2700): Stainless steel components — removes free iron, restores corrosion resistance. Method A (nitric acid) or Method E (citric acid) per customer spec.
  • Electroless Nickel (ASTM B733): Uniform coating on complex geometry. Class 4 / 6 / 7 available. Hardness up to 70 HRC post-bake.
  • Chem Film / Alodine (MIL-DTL-5541): Aluminum components requiring electrical conductivity retention. Type 1 and Type 2.
  • Black Oxide (MIL-DTL-13924): Steel components. Class 1 standard.
  • Laser Marking: Part number, serial, drawing revision — permanent, non-dimensional-affecting.

Typical Aerospace Parts We Machine

As a reference for procurement engineers evaluating aerospace machining companies in Vietnam, the following part types represent regular production at VNcontX. This is not an exhaustive list — it reflects what buyers have actually sent us.

Part Type Material Tolerance Class Volume Range
Structural brackets & ribs 7075-T6 Al ±0.005mm / GD&T 10–500 pcs
Actuator housings 17-4 PH SS ±0.003mm precision 5–200 pcs
Engine mount fittings Ti-6Al-4V Gr5 ±0.005mm / true position 1–50 pcs
Hydraulic manifold blocks 6061-T6 / 7075-T6 ±0.005mm port threads 10–300 pcs
Control surface linkages 4340 steel (HT) ±0.005mm bore 25–500 pcs
UAV / drone frame components 7075-T6 / Ti Gr5 ±0.005mm 10–2,000 pcs

Vietnam vs Other Offshore Options for Aerospace Machining Companies

Procurement engineers evaluating aerospace machining companies outside the US typically shortlist three regions: Vietnam, India, and Eastern Europe (primarily Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia). The cost conversation is well-documented elsewhere. The quality and logistics conversation is not.

Factor Vietnam (HCMC) India (Pune / Chennai) Eastern Europe (CZ / PL)
Section 301 Tariff to US 0% 0% 0%
Air freight to US West Coast 2–3 days 3–5 days 5–7 days
Timezone overlap with US (EST) 11–12 hrs ahead — evening overlap 9.5–10.5 hrs ahead — similar 5–6 hrs ahead — strong overlap
CMM FAI documentation maturity High — Zeiss Calypso standard Variable by shop High — EU aerospace supply chain
5-axis DMG Mori availability Yes — on-site HCMC Available at Tier-1 shops High density
EVFTA (EU export tariff) 0% under EVFTA Standard MFN rates apply EU member — free movement
Landed cost vs China (post-tariff) 30–40% lower 20–35% lower 10–20% lower (higher labor cost)

The practical difference: Eastern Europe wins on timezone for real-time engineering calls. Vietnam wins on air freight speed to the US West Coast and landed cost. India is competitive on price but documentation consistency varies sharply between shops. For US aerospace buyers prioritizing FAI package quality and fast prototype turnaround, Vietnam’s combination of 2–3 day air freight and established CMM workflow is difficult to match at equivalent price points.

FAQ — Aerospace CNC Machining Vietnam

+ Does VNcontX hold AS9100 Rev D certification?
VNcontX currently operates under ISO 9001:2015 with AS9100-aware process controls — including EN 9102 First Article, PPAP capability, material traceability, and Cpk/Ppk-documented production. Full AS9100 Rev D certification is targeted for Q4 2026. Buyers whose supply chain quality requirements mandate an AS9100-registered supplier should verify applicability with their quality team. We are happy to provide our current quality manual and audit-ready documentation for review.
+ What titanium grades can you machine to aerospace tolerances?
We regularly machine Ti Grade 2 (commercially pure, corrosion-resistant applications), Ti Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V — the structural workhorse), and Ti Grade 23 (Ti-6Al-4V ELI — surgical and flight-critical implant-grade). All titanium is machined at low SFM with high-pressure through-spindle coolant. Tool life is monitored per program to prevent work-hardening induced dimensional shift. Material certs and PMI verification available on request.
+ Can you support ITAR-controlled parts?
VNcontX is a Vietnam-registered manufacturer. ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations) restricts the export of certain defense-related technology and data from the US. Whether a specific aerospace part or drawing falls under ITAR export control is determined by the US exporter — not by VNcontX. Buyers must confirm their export licensing status and obtain any required export licenses before transmitting controlled technical data. We work with customers who have completed this process. Contact us at duc.nguyen@vncontx.com for a confidential discussion.
+ What is the typical lead time for an aerospace prototype order?
FAI samples and first-article prototypes: 3–5 business days for simple geometry, 5–7 days for multi-setup 5-axis parts. Standard production runs (10–500 pcs with approved FAI): 7–12 business days. Expedited production: 5–7 business days. Lead times are confirmed at DFM review, before order acceptance. Complex titanium parts with multiple finishing operations may require 10–14 days. All timelines include CMM FAI and documentation package.
+ How does shipping from Vietnam affect aerospace supply chain planning?
VNcontX ships from Ho Chi Minh City — Cat Lai Port and Tan Son Nhat International Airport are within 25km. Air freight to LAX runs 2–3 business days. Air to JFK or ORD: 3–4 days. Sea freight (West Coast US): 18–22 days. For aerospace prototype cycles, air freight is standard and commercially viable given Vietnam’s 0% Section 301 tariff rate. Parts ship with full documentation package and are DDP-capable (Delivered Duty Paid) on request.
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