Circuits Central offers more than two decades of experience paired with our diverse pool of clients across multiple sectors in Toronto. This expertise allows us to leverage our knowledge and proven practices to deliver value to our clients.

Industrial Sector companies require more than just manufacturing solutions from their EMS Suppliers. Our team works in close partnership with clients to implement the most effective supply chain solution that satisfies rigorous quality standards, cost, and delivery requirements.

Industrial Electronics Manufacturers

Our background in Lean Manufacturing and ISO Standards of practice has been of great benefit to our diverse client and product pool. It has enabled us to deliver the highest quality service with the most efficient and reliable execution possible.

Leading Industrial Electronics Manufacturer in Toronto

Through our Research & Development activities, we continuously develop new techniques and innovative procedures and capabilities to meet challenging electronic manufacturing requirements. As a result, we help our clients reduce costs and accelerate time-to-market.

Circuits Central’s industrial Electronic PCB manufacturing manufacturing experience includes:

  • Electrical Grid Distribution, Protection & Monitoring Equipment
  • Industrial Control & Automation Equipment
  • RF Systems

As a leading Industrial Electronics Manufacturer in Toronto, we love working with our diverse client-base to deliver top-quality products and services that will continue to benefit them.

Our Industrial Electronics Manufacturing Experience Includes:

Electrical Grid Distribution, Protection & Monitoring Equipment

Electrical Grid Distribution, Protection & Monitoring Equipment protects electrical power systems from issues that result from faulted parts that disconnect from the electrical network. We implement a protection scheme as a way to stabilize the power system. To do so, we isolate faulty components and leave as much of the network as we can to operate. Protection schemes primarily apply a pragmatic way to clear a system’s faults and use protective devices to ensure a top-quality defence.

We know how to power Electrical Grid Distribution, Protection & Monitoring Equipment for our clients so that they can best utilize these practices.

Industrial Control & Automation Equipment

Industrial Control & Automation Equipment are devices that are mechanical, electromechanical, and solid-state. These pieces of equipment can control or monitor power utilization apparatuses. The purpose of this equipment is to provide solutions that cover manufacturing, building sectors, and transportation at all levels of complexity.

At Circuits Central Toronto, we are experts in Industrial Control & Automation Equipment. If you feel intimidated or confused by this process, leave it in our hands, and we will guide you through it.

RF Systems

RF Systems (also known as Radio-frequency engineering) is a type of electronic engineering that applies transmission lines, antenna, waveguide, and electromagnetic field aspects to a device’s design. These systems need to be included in all components, like items that receive a radio wave (example: radios, WiFi, and mobile phones).

With our extensive background, we know how to work with RF Systems for our clients who need them.

At Circuits Central, we have a wide variety of experience when it comes to Industrial Manufacturing. We know how to work complex systems like Electrical Grid Distribution, Protection & Monitoring Equipment, Industrial Control & Automation Equipment, and RF Systems. Our decades of experience have given us the tools to work with systems in a variety of industries, providing successful outcomes. Give us a call today at 1 (888) 821-7746, fill out our contact form, or send us an email at info@circuits-central.com.

FAQ

Industrial electronics programs typically involve complex assemblies, strict functional requirements, and buyers who need a manufacturing partner with enough process discipline to deliver consistent results across multiple production runs and product revisions. Circuits Central is structured to support these demands — from early prototyping and DFM review through production builds, post-manufacturing testing, and specialized rework — with documented processes and clear communication at each stage. The focus is on reliable execution that meets industrial expectations for quality, repeatability, and delivery.
Circuits Central’s industrial manufacturing experience spans a broad range of product categories including electrical grid distribution, protection and monitoring equipment, industrial control and automation systems, RF systems, electrical test and measurement equipment, motor drives and power conversion electronics, elevator controls, oil and mining electronics, ground water and environmental sensors, and industrial IoT and remote monitoring devices. These categories often involve complex mixed-technology assemblies, demanding functional requirements, and the need for consistent build quality across revisions and production runs. If your product category isn’t listed, it’s worth a conversation — the range of industrial programs supported is broad.
Yes. Industrial control, automation, and motor drive builds commonly involve mixed technologies, high-current handling, thermal management considerations, and strict functional requirements where assembly quality and repeatability are critical. Circuits Central supports these programs by aligning build documentation, sourcing strategy, and inspection and test planning so that complex control and power electronics can be built consistently and supported across design revisions without losing build continuity.
Yes. Turnkey manufacturing at Circuits Central can include sourcing components and bare boards, kitting, assembly, and agreed inspection or testing — reducing procurement and coordination overhead for industrial OEMs. Mixed consignment is also available for programs where the customer wants to supply certain parts, manage specific preferred suppliers, or consume existing inventory. The most practical model depends on lead times, approved alternates, and sourcing risk, and is confirmed during quoting rather than applied as a default.
Post-assembly quality steps for industrial programs can include automated optical inspection (AOI), X-ray inspection for hidden solder joints such as BGAs and QFNs, and customer-specified functional test approaches. For industrial assemblies where escapes carry significant downstream cost or field risk, defining test requirements early — during quoting or build planning rather than after assembly — results in better coverage, less rework, and a cleaner path to release. Existing test fixtures or functional test scripts can often be integrated directly into the build plan. If conformal coating or other environmental protection requirements apply to your assembly, those should be identified during quoting so the build plan reflects them from the start.
Engineering change orders and design revisions for industrial programs are managed through a controlled process to prevent unintended build variation between production runs. When a change is introduced, Circuits Central reviews the impact on the BOM, pick-and-place file, assembly notes, and any in-progress kitting or fabrication before proceeding. The goal is to ensure that every change is documented, deliberate, and traceable — so that revision history is unambiguous and each production run is built to the correct and intended design state.
Industrial build timelines are most often impacted by component availability issues, long-lead items without approved alternates, or mismatches between the BOM and pick-and-place file that require clarification before assembly can start. Documentation gaps — including unclear assembly notes, unresolved revision conflicts, or missing test and inspection requirements — can also trigger hold cycles that compress the remaining schedule. A short pre-build readiness review at the start of a program catches most of these issues before they become schedule problems and establishes clear substitution rules that prevent avoidable holds on repeat orders.
For an accurate quote and smooth launch, Circuits Central typically needs the BOM, Gerbers or fabrication outputs, pick-and-place file, assembly drawings and notes, target quantities, delivery expectations, and any inspection, programming, or functional test requirements. For industrial programs with specific environmental, coating, or traceability requirements, those should be included at the quoting stage so the build plan reflects them from the start. If components are customer-supplied, a kitting plan that identifies known shortages and approved alternates should be included. Complete inputs at the outset reduce clarification cycles, improve pricing accuracy, and provide the most realistic picture of achievable lead times.

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