Custom Burnout Ovens Engineered for Zero-Residue Results

Clean cycles. Zero residue. Full control.

Engineering for Process Integrity

Burnout is a process demanding precision, not brute heat. Whether removing investment casting wax, organic binders, or powder-coating residue, temperature control and exhaust management determine both process success and compliance.

At Precision Quincy, custom means collaboration. Our engineers build burnout ovens that balance airflow, ramp rates, and emissions control to deliver clean, repeatable removal cycles without damaging molds, tooling, or components.

We design for the realities of your operation: complex geometries, high-volume throughput, or strict environmental limits. Every chamber, duct, and burner system is engineered to perform consistently and safely under demanding conditions.

Burnout

No Shortcuts, No Residue: Only Engineered Precision

Every burnout system we build starts with your materials, cycle profile, and environmental standards. Our engineers design and validate every component, combustion chamber, airflow path, burner sequence, and exhaust treatment,  to maintain process integrity while meeting air-quality and safety regulations.

Our burnout oven design principles:

Material compatibility

Burnout cycles preserve mold integrity, prevent distortion, and protect sensitive alloys or ceramics
Balanced airflow and zoning ensure complete removal of waxes, binders, or coatings

Systems sized and sequenced for your load density and production cadence

NFPA 86–compliant combustion design with options for afterburners, scrubbers, or oxidizers to meet EPA and local air-quality standards

Our burnout ovens are tested for thermal uniformity, exhaust balance, and repeatable performance, and are backed by complete process documentation and long-term service support.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What industrial applications use burnout ovens?
How does a burnout oven differ from a curing or heat-treat oven?
How does Precision Quincy manage emissions and safety during burnout?
What materials can be processed in burnout ovens?
Can Precision Quincy retrofit existing burnout ovens?