Bathroom Hardware Components via 304 Stainless Steel MIM
Bathroom OEMs need complex internal geometries, cosmetic-grade surfaces, and cost stability across long product lifecycles. Replacing brass castings and machined bodies with 304 MIM reduces material cost and eliminates zinc depletion concerns in aggressive water.
Applications
Faucet and mixer bodies
Internal waterways and mixing chambers formed in one MIM cycle.
Shower valve cartridges & housings
Precision internal features with post-machining on sealing interfaces only.
Drain and waste components
Stainless trim and mechanisms for wet bathroom environments.
Concealed installation hardware
Structural stainless internals behind decorative finishes.
Benefits for OEM Buyers
No brass plating dependency
304 can be finished to spec without copper-zinc substrate concerns.
Complex design support
MIM enables internal channels impractical for conventional brass casting yields.
Consistent lot quality
Sintering profiles and density checks reduce porosity risk versus some cast grades.
Global export readiness
ISO 9001 production supporting OEM programs across 30+ export markets.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can MIM parts meet cosmetic bathroom finish requirements?
External surfaces can be machined, polished, or coated per OEM finish spec. Internal MIM texture is typically not customer-facing.
Brass vs 304 MIM for bathroom TCO?
TCO improves when annual volume is high, brass material is volatile, and plating or machining steps can be removed.
Lead time for new bathroom SKU tooling?
Pilot tooling often 3–4 weeks; first articles 6–8 weeks from design freeze depending on complexity.
Evaluate bathroom hardware conversion to MIM 304
Share your brass component drawing for engineering review and sampling timeline.
Request a QuoteRelated pages