
Heavy Equipment Machining in Corpus Christi, TX
Subtropical Gulf Coast climate.
For heavy equipment machining, the service area covers roughly 200 miles from central Corpus Christi. Emergency dispatch is available outside business hours for active-damage situations.
Common reasons to call
- Worn pin and bore on a track loader, dozer, or excavator
- Hydraulic cylinder rod, gland, or barrel rebuild
- Line boring a worn pivot or bucket attachment
- Crankshaft, journal, or rod work on a large diesel
- Resurface a cracked or warped exhaust manifold or head
- Bushing replacement and machine fit on a port crane or yard truck
- Custom shaft, key, or coupling for a downed machine
- Reverse-engineer a discontinued part
- Heat shrink or press fit on a large gear or bearing
- Field machining in place when teardown is not practical
Typical work
- Portable line boring of pins and bushings in place
- Cylinder honing, rod polishing, and chrome work for hydraulics
- Large lathe turning of shafts up to multiple feet long
- Mill work for housings, brackets, and adapter plates
- Crankshaft grinding and connecting rod resize
- Press operations for bearings, bushings, and gears
- Welding plus machining to restore worn surfaces to spec
- Fabrication of replacement adapter plates and mounts
Typical turnaround
Common bushing and shaft work commonly returns within three to seven business days. Line boring in the field is often one or two shifts. Crankshaft and gearbox work follows parts lead time and customer downtime priority.
Materials and equipment
- Steel, alloy steel, stainless, bronze bushing stock
- Standard heavy-equipment bushings, seals, bearings, and o-rings
- Hard chrome plating subcontracted where rod refurbishment is included
- Portable line boring rigs and torque tools
- Large turning centers, vertical and horizontal mills, and surface grinders
- Calibrated micrometers, bore gauges, and CMM verification when required
Job sizes
Minor
Single bushing replacement or shaft repair
Standard
Line boring one assembly or single hydraulic cylinder rebuild
Major
Crankshaft grind, multi-cylinder rebuild, or large gearbox refurbishment
Replacement
Custom fabrication and machining of a discontinued or one-off assembly
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓Portable line boring tooling and operators carried for in-field work
- ✓Qualified welders to AWS D1.1 or customer procedure on structural repairs
- ✓CMM dimensional verification available on critical parts
- ✓Lifting and rigging training, with rated slings, used on heavy assembly handling
- ✓Service-manual procedures and torque records followed on rebuilds
OSHA 10 or 30, qualified welders to AWS D1.1 or customer procedure for structural repairs, manufacturer service-manual training on common platforms, general liability insurance, lifting and rigging training, ISO 9001 quality system on shops serving regulated customers.
Common questions
What is line boring and when do I need it?
Line boring is the in-place machining of a worn pivot bore back to a true round and concentric size, then installing a new bushing. It is used when the bore is too worn or oval for a standard bushing to fit cleanly.
Can you come to my equipment, or does it have to come to the shop?
Both. Portable line boring and field machining bring the tooling to the job. Larger turning, milling, and crankshaft work happens at the shop where the bigger machines live.
What size shafts can you turn?
Shop capacity varies. Common heavy machine shops handle shafts up to multiple feet long with significant swing. Confirm length, diameter, and weight when scheduling.
Do you rebuild hydraulic cylinders?
Yes. Service includes rod polish or replacement, gland and seal kit, barrel inspection, and pressure test. Chrome work is subcontracted to a plating partner when required.
Can you reverse-engineer a discontinued part?
Yes. With the original part in hand, calibrated measurement and CMM verification recreate the dimensions. A drawing package can be delivered along with the new part.
What customers do you serve?
Construction fleets, port and terminal operators, oilfield, marine, agricultural, municipal, and ready-mix concrete are common customers in the Coastal Bend market.
Do you weld repair worn surfaces?
Yes, where the OEM allows it. Worn surfaces can be built up with the correct filler and procedure, then machined back to spec. Some assemblies require qualified procedures and certified welders.
Can you certify the dimensions?
Yes. CMM inspection and a written dimensional report are available for parts that require it. ISO 9001 customers and aerospace-grade customers usually require it.
Coastal Bend seasons
Spring (March - May)
Construction and dredging season ramp brings cylinder rebuilds and line boring work on idle equipment.
Summer (June - August)
Peak heat and operating hours expose bushing wear and crank fatigue. Field machining call volume rises.
Fall (September - November)
Budget cycles drive planned refurbishment on yard equipment before year end.
Winter (December - February)
Slower field season is the window for crankshaft, gearbox, and one-off custom work.