Files on every panel
Attach specs, QA photos and PDFs — with preview — to a project, panel or group. Everyone sees the latest, in real time.
Not a generic ERP, not a CAD add-on, not a spreadsheet. Plug in your machines and the shop runs on one live picture: schedule the whole workshop, keep coil stock accurate to the panel, and let your machines report what they actually built.
Works with the roll-forming machines you already run
Built only for light-gauge steel framing (LSF) — also known as cold-formed steel (CFS).
In most light-gauge steel shops the data isn't missing — it's scattered. Sales, the schedule, the coil rack and the machines each tell a different story, so someone spends the week firefighting the plan instead of running the shop.
MyAssembly is built on a simple operational truth: if stock does not reflect what the workshop actually ran, every planning decision starts from a wrong assumption. Machine Link captures the truth of the present. Planning builds the truth of the future. Both must stay connected.
Real machine execution feeds stock, material consumption, and production progress so the operational state stays closer to workshop reality without constant manual corrections.
Quote-to-production proposals, capacity visibility, and deadline feasibility rely on credible stock to produce credible commitments.
When both truths stay connected, teams stop rebuilding the plan from assumptions.
Proposal first, not magic. MyAssembly reads the quote, builds a feasible production path, and keeps critical operational loops aligned with real workshop execution.
MyAssembly reads quantities, material needs, and induced production load from the quote that already exists.
The system proposes line allocation, sequencing, and a planning path based on capacities and operational constraints.
Teams review charge, feasibility, and deadlines before sending work to the shop floor and committing dates.
Machine-fed production updates critical operational flows so stock stays more reliable without constant manual re-entry.
Two pillars hold the shop together: machine-fed execution that keeps stock honest, and quote-to-production planning that proves capacity and deadlines before you commit. Four capabilities make them real — LSF auto-scheduling, connected stock, Machine Link, and one workspace from quote to delivery.
Reliable execution truth makes planning more credible.
Planning gives execution a clearer path.
Open any project, panel or group and the whole team works in one place — files, comments and checklists, live, with no extra CAD seat.
Attach specs, QA photos and PDFs — with preview — to a project, panel or group. Everyone sees the latest, in real time.
Threaded discussions on projects, panels and allocations. Mention a teammate, resolve when it's done, and see who has read it.
Build custom checks on any project, panel or group and tick them off as the floor moves. Your process, enforced.
Select, isolate, hide and focus panels in the browser, overlay live production status, and review together with shared cursors.
MyAssembly closes the gap between the quote, the plan, workshop capacity, and execution-fed stock so teams can release work with more confidence.
Each use case starts from the same reality: the quote exists, but confidence in the production plan and stock does not.
Check induced load, line impact, material tension, and whether the requested date is realistic before answering the customer.
Turn the quote into a proposed production path and release work with clearer line allocation, sequencing, and material logic.
Keep stock and operational state aligned with what machines actually ran so the plan stays closer to reality through the week.
Reduce the gap between what was planned, what was consumed, and what the workshop actually executed.
Stop re-keying the same numbers into disconnected files. One live system gives the whole shop the same picture — so scheduling gets cleaner, waste drops, and deadlines hold, from the very first project.
It runs your whole shop on one live system: it turns a quote into a feasible production plan, shows capacity and deadlines before you commit, and keeps coil stock aligned with what your machines actually built.
No. MyAssembly handles the operational planning and stock loop close to the workshop. It can coexist with your ERP and does not require replacement to evaluate fit.
Not at all — it's not a design, BIM, Revit or detailing tool. It starts once the quote exists and focuses on production planning and execution-linked stock for LSF workshops. For design, our dedicated project is Stud.
Machine events update operational state and material consumption from real execution, so stock stays closer to workshop reality without critical operator re-entry.
Yes. That is a common starting point. MyAssembly is meant to replace manual quote-to-plan reconstruction and make capacity and stock visibility more credible.
Yes. The pilot can start with one real flow and one connected machine, which is relevant for many workshops running one to three rollformers.
We install Machine Link on one machine remotely and schedule a real project: one quote in, one planning proposal, one connected production loop, and one live stock model on a defined scope — so value is visible in weeks, not a big-bang rollout. You only pay if it earns its place.
It makes induced load, line allocation, material tension, and deadline feasibility visible before release, so teams can commit dates with a more credible operational view.
Yes. MyAssembly is machine-agnostic — Machine Link runs today on Howick, Pinnacle and Scottsdale roll-formers and connects whatever brand you already own. You keep your hardware; we replace the spreadsheets.
Yes. Every project, panel and group carries shared files, threaded comments with @mentions, and checklists — all live, in the browser, with no extra CAD seat.