A useful robotics RFQ is not only a file upload. It should explain the part, application, quantity, material intent, inspection needs, and what risk must be reviewed before supplier routing.
The first review should identify what the part does, what it connects to, and what failure mode matters. A robot joint housing, sensor bracket, wrist plate, shaft sleeve, and cover panel may all be mechanical parts, but they create different manufacturing assumptions.
The strongest package includes CAD, a drawing PDF, material target, finish, quantity range, delivery target, and any critical dimensions that should not be guessed by the supplier. If a drawing is not ready, photos and sample notes can still start a route review.
Buyers move faster when mandatory requirements are separated from nice-to-have preferences. This keeps early quoting realistic and reduces back-and-forth.
A good RFQ also explains where the buyer is worried: bearing fit, cosmetic finish, supplier documentation, lead time, assembly alignment, country routing, or unknown material choices. That context helps prevent a cheap quote from becoming an expensive rework cycle.