Restore Performance. Extend Service Life. Reduce Replacement Costs.
Worn or damaged toolholding equipment does not always need replacing. Nydaloxe Precision offers a professional repair and servicing operation for a wide range of toolholding products restoring components to original specification at a fraction of the cost of new, and returning them to service faster than sourcing a replacement unit.
Tool Holder Repair and Reconditioning
Over time, tool holders accumulate wear at critical interfaces taper bores, clamping faces and locating features. We assess, regrind and recondition:
- VDI, BMT, HSK and straight shank tool holder bodies
- Taper bore regrinding to restore contact percentage and concentricity
- Clamping face and locating surface refacing
- Hydraulic chuck refurbishment
- Coolant port cleaning and seal replacement
- External reconditioning and protective coating
All reconditioned tool holders are measured and issued with runout and dimensional data before return to service.
Driven Tool Head Servicing
Driven tool heads are high-value precision units that repay investment in regular servicing. Our driven tool servicing covers:
- Bearing replacement and preload setting
- Gear train inspection and replacement where worn
- Seal and O-ring replacement throughout
- Spindle runout and backlash verification
- Coolant system function test
- Drive coupling inspection and replacement
Angle Head and Speeder Servicing
Angle heads and speeders are high-value precision units that repay investment in regular servicing.
Send Us Your Tooling
The process is straightforward: contact us for a repair/ service number, send us your tooling with a description of the issue or a request for a service assessment. We will inspect each item, report back with a quote and lead time, and proceed on your approval. No hidden charges, no return without authorisation.
For high-volume customers we offer a scheduled exchange service replacement units shipped immediately while your tooling is in for repair, keeping production uninterrupted.


