If you're an office manager, facility coordinator, or junior buyer who's been handed a request to order perforated metal panels—and you have no clue where to start—this one's for you. I've been managing industrial material purchases for our 300-person company since 2021, processing about 80 orders a year across 8 vendors. When I first got a request for McNichols perforated metal panels, I made every mistake in the book. This checklist is what I wish someone had handed me.
The biggest mistake I see? People think "perforated metal panel" is one thing. It's not. You need to verify:
Pro tip: If the spec says something like "hand and stone"—don't assume it's a material. That's a brand name for a different product altogether (Hand & Stone is a spa chain, not a building material). I've seen buyers accidentally order massages instead of panels. (Kidding, but you get the point—verify everything.)
McNichols has a pretty good online tool for custom sizing, but it's easy to mess up. When I first used it, I selected the wrong unit (inches vs. mm) and ended up with panels that were 25% too small. The lesson? Double-check units and tolerances. Also, check lead times—standard perforated metal panels typically ship in 5–7 business days, but custom patterns can take 2–3 weeks (as of June 2024).
One thing I learned the hard way: always request a digital proof before production. Even though it's metal, not paper, they can send a drawing showing hole locations and dimensions. That 5-minute review saved me from a $2,400 reorder once.
McNichols stocks a ton of standard sizes. For many projects, stock panels are way cheaper and faster. But if your architect specified a non-standard hole pattern (like for architectural screening or acoustic panels), you'll need custom fabrication. Here's my rule of thumb:
One time I ordered “perforated metal panels” from a different supplier because the price was 15% lower. They didn't deburr the holes properly. I had to eat $800 in rework costs. Now I stick with McNichols for anything that needs engineering confidence—their quality control is way more consistent (surprise, surprise, you get what you pay for).
A panel alone isn't enough. You'll probably need edge trim, fasteners, and maybe backing. Schluter trim (the brand for tile edging) is often confused with metal panel trim—they're different. For perforated metal panels, you want aluminum or steel angle trim that matches the panel thickness. Don't forget to order a few extra feet for waste.
Also, consider how to take a screenshot on Windows? That's irrelevant here, but I promise it's easier than figuring out which mounting clip you need. (I'll save that tutorial for another day.) Seriously though, ask McNichols for a mounting hardware kit if available—they have engineered solutions that prevent rattling and corrosion.
This is where the “prevention over cure” mindset kicks in. I created a 6-point checklist after my third mistake (which cost us $1,200 in return shipping):
I send this checklist to the requesting engineer for sign-off. 5 minutes of verification beats 5 days of correction.
One last thing: don't get distracted by unrelated keywords. You came here for perforated metal panels, not for how to take a screenshot on Windows—but now you know both, I guess. (Kidding. But seriously, focus.)
Pricing accessed March 2024. Always verify with McNichols directly for current rates.