When purchasing engineered roll forming or coil processing equipment, the warranty structure is one of the most misunderstood — yet most important — parts of the contract.
For capital equipment investments that may range from hundreds of thousands to several million dollars, buyers must clearly understand:
What is covered
What is excluded
How long coverage lasts
What triggers warranty claims
What responsibilities fall on the buyer
This page provides an independent, buyer-focused explanation of how warranty structures typically work for OEMs like Bradbury, and what buyers should carefully review before signing.
⚠️ Note: Exact warranty terms are defined in official OEM contracts. This page explains common industry structures and considerations — not a specific legal contract.
A warranty is a contractual agreement in which the manufacturer agrees to repair, replace, or remedy defects that arise due to:
Manufacturing defects
Faulty workmanship
Defective components
Design faults (within scope)
It is not insurance for misuse, wear, or operator error.
In the industrial roll forming sector, warranties commonly follow one of these structures:
Most common structure.
Sometimes used when commissioning date is uncertain.
Some OEMs offer optional extended warranties at additional cost.
The exact trigger point (shipment vs commissioning) should always be clarified.
Typical warranty coverage includes:
✔ Defects in mechanical fabrication
✔ Frame structural issues
✔ Gearbox defects
✔ Manufacturing errors in tooling
✔ Electrical panel build defects
✔ PLC programming errors (initial design faults)
Coverage generally includes repair or replacement of defective parts.
Buyers should pay close attention to exclusions, which typically include:
✖ Normal wear items (bearings, seals, belts, blades)
✖ Tool wear from regular production
✖ Damage caused by improper setup
✖ Operator misuse
✖ Material-related damage
✖ Electrical surges
✖ Environmental damage (moisture, corrosion)
✖ Modifications by third parties
Understanding wear vs defect is critical.
Some warranties cover:
Replacement parts only
Others may cover:
Parts + labor
Many industrial warranties require the buyer to:
Perform labor locally
Return defective components
Provide proof of issue
Cover shipping costs
Clarifying labor coverage is essential.
Tooling warranties are often separate from machine warranties.
Common tooling warranty conditions:
Covers manufacturing defects
Does NOT cover normal wear
Does NOT cover material mismatch damage
May require proper maintenance documentation
Tool life expectations are usually separate from warranty.
Control systems may have:
Separate warranty terms for PLC components
Manufacturer-backed component warranties (e.g., drive supplier warranty)
Limited programming coverage
Third-party electrical component warranties may apply instead of full OEM coverage.
One of the most important clauses:
When does the warranty begin?
It may start from:
Date of shipment
Date of installation
Date of commissioning
Date of FAT (Factory Acceptance Test)
If installation is delayed, warranty clock may still run — unless negotiated otherwise.
Warranty claims typically require:
Maintenance logs
Proof of correct operation
Issue documentation
Photographic or video evidence
Serial number identification
Poor documentation can weaken a claim.
Buyer identifies issue
OEM technical team reviews details
Remote troubleshooting initiated
OEM determines defect vs wear vs misuse
Replacement part authorized (if applicable)
Buyer installs replacement (unless labor included)
Timeline depends on part availability and response speed.
For overseas installations:
Shipping time for replacement parts
Customs delays
Local technician availability
Travel cost for OEM engineer
Warranty coverage may not include international travel expenses unless specified.
Some OEMs offer:
Extended coverage packages
Service agreements
Annual maintenance contracts
Remote diagnostic support plans
These can reduce risk but add cost.
Buyers should compare lifecycle cost vs upfront extension pricing.
“Everything is covered” — it is not.
Wear and tear is not defect.
Operator damage voids coverage.
Modifications may void warranty.
Electrical supply instability can invalidate claims.
Understanding limitations prevents disputes later.
Machine Matcher provides independent warranty advisory support by:
✔ Reviewing contract language before signing
✔ Identifying ambiguous clauses
✔ Clarifying start-date triggers
✔ Evaluating labor vs parts coverage
✔ Comparing warranty terms across OEMs
✔ Advising on extended coverage value
✔ Supporting documentation during disputes
This protects buyers from unexpected post-installation costs.
Before finalizing a Bradbury system order, confirm:
Warranty duration
Start date trigger
Parts vs labor coverage
Tooling warranty scope
Automation & electrical coverage
International support terms
Response time expectations
Claim process requirements
Exclusion clauses
Document everything in writing.
Warranty structures for engineered roll forming equipment are detailed and specific. While OEMs like The Bradbury Group provide warranty coverage against manufacturing defects, buyers must carefully understand scope, exclusions, and procedural requirements.
A clear understanding of warranty terms — before purchase — significantly reduces long-term risk.
Machine Matcher supports buyers through contract review, warranty comparison, and claim process advisory — ensuring capital equipment investments are protected properly.
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