Custom Industrial Blades
Built to Your Print

Specify the geometry, material, hardness, and edge—get blades engineered for cut quality, wear life, and repeatable fit.

What Custom Blades Are

Custom blades (also called custom machine knives) are made-to-print cutting components engineered for a specific machine, material, and cutting method. The right blade design balances edge geometry, wear resistance, toughness, corrosion protection, and dimensional stability—so you get consistent cut quality without unplanned downtime.

Whether you’re replacing an OEM blade or designing a new cutting station, Davion supports both manufacture-to-drawing and build-to-sample workflows with application-driven guidance on materials, heat treatment, and coatings.

About Davion Manufacturing

What We Make

We manufacture custom industrial blades and machine knives including:

Common value adds (as required):

Looking for a specific geometry? Explore product families: Straight Blades, Circular Blades, Slitter Blades, Perforating & Serrated, Scraper / Doctor Blades, and Specialty Blades.

Made to Print Blade Manufacturing

Custom Blades Built Around Your Process

We manufacture custom industrial blades based on your drawing, sample, or existing part specification. Every design is reviewed for cutting behavior, wear mode, and fit into your machine setup — not just geometry. The goal is repeatable performance across production runs, not a one-off part.

Request a Custom Blade Quote

Send your drawing or sample and we will evaluate material, heat treatment, and edge design for your application.
Straight Circular  Slitter  Punch  Perforating  |
Each RFQ is reviewed for manufacturability and cutting performance before pricing.

Applications & Variants

Round Punch Blades

What it is: Punch tooling designed for circular holes or round cutouts, typically used against a matched die or anvil.

When used: Vent holes, hang holes, and repeated round features where consistent cut quality and burr direction control are required.

Rectangular Punch Blades

What it is: Punch tooling for rectangular windows or slots with defined corner radii and controlled edge geometry.

When used: Carton windows, handle features, and cutouts where tight profile requirements and clean corners matter.

Notch Punch Blades

What it is: Punch knives designed to remove a notch from an edge or corner.

When used: Packaging, web converting, and sheet parts where registration features or tear initiators are needed.

Slot Punch Blades

What it is: Punch tooling that creates elongated holes/slots with defined radii and length.

When used: Hang holes, fastener slots, ventilation openings, and alignment features.

Window / Cutout Punch Blades

What it is: Punch blades that remove internal “windows” or larger cutouts.

When used: Cartons, labels, and packaging formats with viewing or access openings.

Handle Cutout Punch Knives

What it is: Punch blades designed for ergonomic cutouts in thicker paperboard or sheet products.

When used: Retail packaging and carry-handle formats needing clean edges and consistent shape.

Vent Hole Punch Blades (Multiple Small Features)

What it is: Punch tools that create repeated small holes or patterns.

When used: Breathable packaging, vented cartons, and functional perforation-like hole arrays.

Intermittent Web Punching Blades

What it is: Punch blades used in timed stations on a moving web.

When used: When cutouts must occur at specific pitch intervals or align to printed graphics.

Rotary Punch / Rotary Die-Style Blades (Station-Defined)

What it is: Rotary tooling that produces repeating cutouts while rotating.

When used: High-speed converting lines requiring continuous motion and repeat patterns.

Kiss-Cut Punch Blades (Depth-Controlled)

What it is: Punching/cutting designed to cut one layer without fully cutting through the backing.

When used: Label stock and laminated webs where controlled depth matters.

Perimeter Punch Knives (Profile Cutting)

What it is: Punch blades that define an external shape and separate parts from sheet/web.

When used: Die-cut-like operations where part outline accuracy is critical.

Scrap Chopper / Trim Punch Knives

What it is: Punch blades used to chop edge trim or scrap into manageable pieces.

When used: Web processes where scrap handling and conveying require size reduction.

High-Wear Punch Blades for Abrasive Materials

What it is: Material selections biased toward wear resistance under abrasive fillers/coatings.

When used: Filled polymers, coated papers, or contamination-prone streams.

Impact-Resistant Punch Blades

What it is: Tooling tuned toward toughness to resist chipping under shock.

When used: Recycling-adjacent punching, inconsistent feed, or harder inclusions.

Stainless Punch Blades (Corrosion Exposure)

What it is: Corrosion-resistant tooling for humid or washdown conditions.

When used: Food-adjacent packaging operations and wet environments.

Stainless Punch Blades (Corrosion Exposure)

What it is: Corrosion-resistant tooling for humid or washdown conditions.

When used: Food-adjacent packaging operations and wet environments.

Anti-Galling Punch Tooling

What it is: Surface strategies to reduce pickup and galling between punch and die.

When used: Sticky materials or applications where friction and heat drive premature wear.

Insertable Punch Edges (Modular Inserts)

What it is: Replaceable edge inserts in a tool body to reduce downtime and maintenance cost.

When used: High-run tools where edge wear is localized and insert replacement is efficient.

Dowel-Located Punch Blades (Repeat Setup)

What it is: Punch knives with dowel/locating features for repeatable alignment.

When used: When registration accuracy and fast changeovers are required.

Matched Punch + Die Pairing Support (Spec-Driven)

What it is: Punch blades specified with attention to mating die geometry and intended clearance.

When used: When burr direction, edge quality, and tool life depend on controlled clearance.

Build-to-Sample Replacements

What it is: Knife replication when drawings aren’t available (sample-based matching).

When used: Legacy equipment, obsolete OEM parts, or incomplete documentation.

Materials, Heat Treat & Coatings (Brief + Cross-Links)

Blade performance starts with selecting the right material and thermal/coating stack for your cut method and product.

Carbon & tool steels

strong wear/toughness options for many general industrial cuts. → See Materials: Carbon & Tool Steels

Stainless steels

corrosion resistance for washdown or humid environments. → See Materials: Stainless Steels

Carbide

extreme wear resistance for highly abrasive applications. → See Materials: Carbide

Ceramic (on request)

specialized wear/chemical needs in select conditions. → See Materials: Ceramic (on request)

Coatings & surface treatments

improve wear life, reduce pickup, and manage friction (application dependent). → See Coatings & Surface Treatments

Heat treatment & hardness

tuned for edge holding vs. chipping resistance. → See Heat Treatment & Hardness

Materials, Heat Treat & Coatings

Quality & Inspection

Custom blades are only as good as their repeatability. We support inspection and documentation levels appropriate to industrial production:Punch blades are sensitive to geometry, edge condition, and alignment features—small deviations can show up as burr, hole distortion, or die wear.

Inspection scope can include:

If your application is sensitive to runout, stack height, or mating clearances, call it out—inspection plans can be tailored accordingly.
Quality & Inspection

Typical Applications (Industries We Support)

Custom blades are frequently specified in:

Packaging & Film (Converting):

slitting, perforating, score/cut, trim

Paper / Tissue / Printing

rotary shear, doctoring, trim, cut-to-length

Food Processing

slicing, portioning, packaging web cut, washdown blades

Plastics & Rubber

pelletizing support cuts, trimming, granulation, slit/rewind

Recycling / Shredding

shredder and granulator knife sets, wear-focused designs

Medical & Surgical (select components)

controlled edge and surface requirements (application-defined)

What We Need From You to Quote (Checklist)

Provide what you have—minimum is fine. We can work from partial data.

Geometry & files

Critical dimensions

Material & performance targets

Use conditions

Checklist

Prototyping, Repeat Orders & Lead Time

Prototype builds

supported for fit and cut validation before scaling.

Repeat orders

controlled revision handling to maintain geometry and performance intent.

Typical lead time

[LEAD TIME] (depends on material, heat treat, coating, and inspection scope).

Minimum order quantity

[MOQ] (many designs can start small; production pricing improves with volume).

If you need matched sets, replacement programs, or stocking recommendations, include that in your RFQ and we’ll propose an approach.

Request a Quote

Send a drawing or sample and we’ll respond with manufacturability feedback and a clear quote scope.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you manufacture blades from a sample instead of a drawing?

Yes. If you can ship a sample, we can evaluate geometry, mounting interfaces, and functional edges to define a made-to-match specification for quoting.

PDF for reference plus DXF/DWG for 2D profiles or STEP for 3D features are ideal. If you only have photos, include a ruler reference and key dimensions.
It depends on what you’re cutting and the environment. Tool steels are common for balanced wear/toughness, stainless is preferred for corrosion/washdown, and carbide is used for highly abrasive duty cycles.
Coatings and surface treatments can help in certain applications (abrasion, pickup, galling). Selection should match the cut method, product, and operating conditions—share your failure mode and we’ll recommend options.
Capability depends on blade type and geometry (straightness/flatness for long knives, runout for circular knives, stack height for slitter sets). Provide critical tolerances and we’ll confirm what’s achievable in the quote.
Yes. Many cutting systems rely on pairing and stack consistency. Request matched sets and specify any required stack height, runout, or clearance targets.
Chipping often points to a mismatch of hardness/toughness, edge geometry, impact loading, or contamination in the cut. We can adjust material, heat treat, and edge prep to shift toward stable wear.
Cut method, product material/thickness, line speed, existing blade spec (if known), and the failure mode (dulling, burrs, chipping, sticking). Even partial details help narrow the right blade design.