One of the most expensive mistakes in manufacturing is choosing tooling based on unit cost.
A £40 tool that lasts half as long as a £90 tool isn’t cheaper.
It’s more expensive. Always.
The real metric that matters is:
Cost per component.
That includes:
- Tool life
- Cycle time
- Machine uptime
- Scrap rate
- Operator intervention
When you look at tooling properly, the cheapest option on paper is rarely the most cost-effective in production.
We’ve seen cases where a slightly more advanced tool design:
- Reduced tool changes by over 50%
- Improved surface finish in a single pass
- Cut cycle time by double-digit percentages
None of that shows up in the purchase order.
As UK tool manufacturers; at Prima Tooling, we design tools around production performance—not catalogue comparisons.
Because in real machining environments, saving £20 on a tool that costs you hours of downtime isn’t a saving at all.
If tooling is being selected purely on price, it’s worth stepping back and reviewing the bigger picture.
