Powder Coating Service
Powder Coating Service for custom metal parts delivers durable, corrosion-resistant, and visually consistent finishes for industrial, OEM, and equipment applications. Ideal for engineers and buyers seeking reliable surface protection, custom color options, and one-stop support that improves part appearance, durability, and production efficiency.
Powder Coating Process Parameters
| Item | Specification |
|---|---|
| Coating Thickness | 60–120 μm typical |
| Curing Temperature | 160–200°C |
| Gloss Range | Matte 10–30 GU; semi-gloss 40–70 GU; gloss 80+ GU |
| Color Options | Black, white, gray, blue, red, custom RAL colors |
| Finish Texture | Smooth, matte, gloss, fine texture, wrinkle texture |
| Masking Areas | Threads, precision holes, sealing faces, bearing seats, contact surfaces |
| Suitable Materials | Aluminum, mild steel, carbon steel, stainless steel |
| Inspection Focus | Coating thickness, color match, surface coverage, adhesion, masked areas |

Explore Industrial Parts Enhanced by Powder Coating Services

Metal Equipment Housing

Mounting Support Bracket

Sheet Metal Panel

Industrial Transmission Gear

Precision Drive Shaft

Protective Machine Cover

Welded Support Frame

Mechanical Support Arm

Protective Cover Plate
Need Reliable Powder Coating for Custom Metal Parts?
Why Choose DZ Making for Powder Coating Services?
From manufacturing to finishing, DZ Making supports custom powder coated parts with practical pricing, coordinated service, and a more efficient production process.
Factory Pricing
By combining machining, powder coating, and inspection through one coordinated supply chain, we help reduce outsourcing layers, extra logistics, and overall sourcing costs for custom metal parts.
One-Stop Service
From part production to powder coating and final inspection, one integrated workflow helps simplify sourcing, reduce supplier handoffs, and improve overall project efficiency.
Faster Turnaround
With quick quotation response and coordinated production support, we help customers shorten decision cycles, reduce communication delays, and move custom parts into production more efficiently.
Our Powder Coating Production Capacity
As a powder coating manufacturer, DZ Making supports custom metal parts with organized production processes, including surface preparation, powder application, curing, and final inspection. With reliable powder coating machine support, we help customers improve finish consistency, batch repeatability, and overall production efficiency for prototype and volume orders.
Material Grades for Powder Coating
DZ Making provides powder coating services for a wide range of metal grades used in custom manufacturing, including aluminum, carbon steel, and stainless steel. We support both customer-specified materials and production-ready parts for industrial and OEM applications.
- 6061/7075 Aluminum
- Mild Steel
- Carbon Stee
- 304 Stainless Steel
- 316 Stainless Steel


Powder Coating Color Options
We offer powder coating in a variety of standard colors, custom color options, and surface finishes to match different product requirements. Our service supports visual consistency, brand-specific appearance needs, and practical finishing demands across custom projects.
- Black
- White
- Gray
- Blue
- Red
Industrial Applications for Powder Coating
Our powder coating services are suitable for custom metal parts that require a durable surface, consistent appearance, and reliable finishing performance. They are widely used in products where both exterior quality and long-term usability matter.
- Industrial Equipment
- Automation Systems
- Electrical Components
- Automotive Parts
- Robotic Equipment

What Global Customers Say About DZ Making?
See how international buyers, engineers, and sourcing teams evaluate DZ Making for powder coating services, precision powder coating quality, project communication, and overall support for custom metal parts.
Powder Coating Design Considerations
Good powder coating results start with proper design planning, helping reduce coating-related issues while improving finish consistency, part function, and production efficiency for custom metal components.
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FAQs
What materials can be powder coated?
Powder coating is typically applied to metal parts, including aluminum, carbon steel, mild steel, and stainless steel. The best coating approach depends on the material grade, part geometry, and surface condition. If your project involves special materials, our team can review the requirements before production.
Yes, but it depends on where the coating is applied. For precision components, powder coating is usually more suitable for non-critical or visible exterior surfaces. Areas related to fit, sealing, threading, or assembly should be reviewed carefully before coating.
Yes. Our powder coating services can support a range of color and surface appearance requirements, including matte, gloss, texture, and selected custom specifications. For OEM and industrial parts, defining the target powder coat finish early helps improve visual consistency and reduce variation between prototype and production batches.
The most important factors include material type, part geometry, surface condition, visible areas, and any functional features that should not be coated. Reviewing these details early helps reduce coating-related issues and improves the final result.
It depends on the application. Powder coating is often chosen for metal parts that need a more uniform finish, better durability, and a cleaner production-ready appearance. The right option should be based on the part function, appearance goals, and the service environment.
To quote accurately, it is best to provide drawings or 3D files, material requirements, quantities, color or finish preferences, and notes on any critical surfaces or non-coated areas. The clearer the project information, the more practical and accurate the quotation will be.
What Is Powder Coating? How Does It Work?
Powder coating is a dry finishing process used to create a durable, uniform, and visually consistent surface on custom metal parts. Unlike liquid paint, it applies powdered coating material to the part surface and then cures it under heat to form a solid finish layer. In industrial and OEM manufacturing, powder coating is widely used for metal housings, brackets, panels, covers, frames, and other parts that require a clean appearance and reliable surface performance.
The typical powder coating process includes the following steps:
- Part Review: Check the part material, geometry, visible surfaces, and any functional areas that should not be coated.
Surface Preparation: Remove oil, oxidation, burrs, dust, or other contamination that could affect adhesion and finish quality. - Masking of Critical Areas: Protect threads, holes, mating surfaces, contact points, and other functional features from coating buildup.
- Powder Application: Apply the powder evenly to the prepared surface using appropriate powder coating equipment and controlled process settings.
- Heat Curing: Cure the coated part under controlled temperature conditions, allowing the powder to melt, flow, and bond to the surface.
- Final Inspection: Check coating coverage, color consistency, overall appearance, and the condition of masked or functional areas before shipment or assembly.
What Are the Advantages and Disadvantages of Powder Coating?
Powder coating is widely used on custom metal parts because it can provide a clean, durable, and production-ready surface. Compared with many conventional finishing methods, it offers a more uniform powder coat finish and works well for parts that require a consistent appearance across batches.
At the same time, powder coating is not suitable for every part or every design condition. Its performance depends on the substrate, part geometry, coating thickness, and finish requirements. Understanding the advantages and disadvantages of powder coating helps engineers and buyers choose a finishing method that fits the actual application.
Advantages of Powder Coating
- Improved Surface Durability: Powder coating forms a solid cured layer that holds up well on parts exposed to handling, transport, and regular industrial use.
- More Uniform Appearance: A well-controlled powder coating process can create a more even and consistent finish across visible surfaces.
- Broader Color Selection: Powder coating supports many standard colors, textures, and surface looks, making it suitable for products with both functional and visual requirements.
- Better Exterior Coverage: On many metal parts, powder coating can provide reliable coverage over broad exterior areas and complex visible surfaces.
Disadvantages of Powder Coating
- Added Surface Thickness: Powder coating builds a measurable layer on the surface, which can affect holes, threads, mating areas, and other tight-tolerance features.
- Limits on Complex Shapes: Deep recesses, sharp corners, narrow channels, and complex shapes can make powder distribution less uniform.
- Higher Surface Prep Requirements: Adhesion and finish quality depend heavily on proper cleaning, pretreatment, and part condition before coating.
- Less Flexible Touch-Up: Once cured, the finish is less flexible for touch-up or local correction than some liquid paint processes.
Powder Coating vs Painting: What Is the Difference?
Powder coating is a dry finishing process that applies electrostatically charged powder to a metal surface and then cures it under heat to form a solid coating layer. Its main advantage is a thicker, more uniform, and more durable finish, which makes it well suited for metal parts that require a consistent appearance and stronger surface performance in repeat production.
Painting is a liquid coating process in which paint is sprayed or applied onto the part surface and then dried by air or heat. Compared with powder coating, paint usually creates a thinner layer and offers greater flexibility for touch-up, color adjustment, or parts with tighter dimensional limits, but it may not provide the same level of coating build or finish consistency.






