The Missing Connection: Wire Harness Quoting Joins the Digital Age
May 1, 2026 | Joanne Harris, Tech-2marketingEstimated reading time: 1 minute
Walk the floor of a modern wire harness manufacturing facility, and the investment in technology is hard to miss. Automated wire cutting and stripping machines process thousands of cuts an hour with sub-millimeter precision. Computerized crimping presses deliver consistent, validated terminations that a hand tool never could. Laser wire markers, automated test benches, and vision-guided assembly stations represent hundreds of thousands of dollars of capital investment, all in service of building a better harness faster and more reliably than the competition.
Then someone emails over a customer print, and the transformation stops cold.
From that moment, the quoting process that determines whether the shop wins the job looks remarkably like it did 30 years ago. A person opens the print, manually reads and interprets the drawing, types the data into a spreadsheet, cross-references it against an ERP system, builds out labor steps by hand, tracks down supplier pricing through familiar channels, and assembles a quote document that may take days or weeks for a complex assembly. The most sophisticated piece of equipment in that workflow is a PDF viewer.
The central paradox of wire harness manufacturing today is that an industry that has eagerly embraced automation on the shop floor has left its operational backbone almost entirely untouched. The craftsmanship has been amplified by technology. The business processes supporting it have not. That is now beginning to change, and the story of how it changes, and why it took so long, tells you something important about both the culture of the trade and the moment the industry finds itself in.
To continue reading this article, which appeared in the April 2026 SMT007 Magazine, click here.
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