Jig Supply Policy

Supply of Jig Systems with no digits

We do not supply our jig systems to anyone who is not purchasing our digits.

There are several reasons for this, but the main one is we cannot guarantee our jigs will work correctly with any competitors’ products. Our digits have been designed to very tight and unique tolerances for our own digits.

When designing our jigs we spend several weeks in the design and testing phase. We subsidise our jigs heavily to support only our own digits, not any rival products for which we cannot guarantee the quality or source.

Our jigs are only supplied to customers who are using our digits as this is how we eventually recoup our R & D costs.

Every jig design we produce has been protected worldwide. Should we find any company or individual  copying our designs we will act for both design infringements and damages. This will include any possible loss of digit sales also.

Our digits have been independently tested by The Accelerated Weather Labs (a British Standards Testing Lab) and have passed or exceeded all of the required tests. This means they are proven to meet BS AU145e.

Many companies claim they meet the standard but in most cases they are simply saying they are, often with absolutely no testing having taken place.

There is a huge difference between saying the standard has been met and having independent tests to prove so.

The costs of the tests are around £50,000 and take 15 months to complete. This is a huge commitment for any company to take, but we were happy to invest in our offer to you.

Before you commit to buying from an alternative supplier we suggest you ask them if they have had been tested by an independent British Standards testing company and get proof.

We have tested in-house most of our competitors’ offerings and in virtually all cases we have found them falling well short of the standard.

There’s a reason why our competitors’ products are found to be cheap and that is simply poor-quality materials or production methods.

Do you really want to use a product which may come back as a warranty issue in the future?