Company / About

About NS CNC

NS CNC designs and manufactures precision desktop CNC machines in Surrey, BC, near Vancouver. We started in jewelry. We stayed because the work demands it.

Sixteen machines across roughly 25 years, all designed and built in one place — now running in research labs, production shops, and jewelry studios on multiple continents.

The NS CNC facility in Surrey, BC
Facility / Surrey, BC · Canada
Company / At a Glance

A precision machine company, built around one bench.

What NS CNC is, in four lines — before the story of how it got here.

Surrey, BC, Canada

Designed, assembled, and calibrated in one facility near Vancouver — not sourced and rebadged.

5-axis desktop CNC

Benchtop mills with full 5-axis motion and sub-micron resolution, in a footprint that fits a bench.

Verified before it ships

Axis geometry, spindle runout, and positional accuracy checked to specification on every machine.

Running in research labs

The same mills that cut jewelry wax fabricate NMR microcoils, microfluidic chips, and lab sensors.

Story / Origins

One problem. One machine.

NS CNC was founded in the 1990s by an artist with an engineering background who needed tools that didn't exist. Fine jewelry at the level he required meant carving wax by hand — slow, imprecise, and impossible to scale. The solution was to build a better machine.

The NS CNC machine line

From hand carving to a fifth axis.

The first NS CNC mills were 3- and 4-axis — a significant improvement over hand carving, but still limited. Complex designs (depth, undercuts, compound curves) needed a fifth axis. In 2009 the Mira 1 shipped: the first 5-axis desktop CNC mill built for jewelry wax modeling.

Jewelers adopted it immediately — and before long, researchers and manufacturers found the same accuracy solved problems of their own.

The Through-Line

One requirement — accuracy that doesn't drift — served every field.

NS CNC has only ever built one kind of thing: a small machine that holds a tight number across a long program. Jewelers needed it for compound curves and undercuts. Researchers needed it to fabricate features invisible to the eye. The requirement was identical, so the same bench served both.

That's how a company that started in fine jewelry ended up with machines in research institutions on multiple continents — and cited in peer-reviewed work well beyond it.

See where they're running
Field / Where They Run

Built for one trade, adopted by many.

The Mira started in jewelry. The same properties that made it exceptional there made it useful in fields well beyond it.

Research labs

Universities found the same sub-micron accuracy and stability suited fabricating NMR microcoils and laboratory sensors. The machines now run in research institutions on multiple continents.

Science & publications

Micromachining

Microfluidic chips and features at scales invisible to the eye, made possible by accuracy that holds across a long program.

Micromachining

Jewelry

The trade it was built for. 5-axis wax modeling for rings, settings, and fine detail — the compound curves and undercuts hand carving and 3-axis mills can't reach.

Jewelry workflow
Story / The Name

Why "Mira"?

In 2009, the first 5-axis machine was ready to ship and needed a name. Technical descriptors, acronyms, and power words were all considered and rejected. The machine wasn't a statement of power. It was a tool for making something beautiful.

NS CNC team at a trade show

Named for a star, not a spec.

The name is short for "miraculous" — the reaction the first machine drew from jewelers who had only ever carved wax by hand. Miraculous → Mira.

It is also a variable star in the constellation Cetus. The overlap was a coincidence, but not an unwelcome one.

Customers around the world have since given their machines their own names — Miranda, Mirochka, Miroslava, Maria, Meir. We consider that the best possible feedback.

Where / One Facility

Designed, built, and calibrated in one place.

Every NS CNC machine is engineered, assembled, and verified under one roof in Surrey, BC — not sourced from a catalog and rebadged.

Inside the NS CNC facility in Surrey, BC

The team that designs it is the team that supports it.

Design, machining, assembly, and calibration happen in the same building, with the same people. The product development that sets the standard and the production that meets it are not separate companies — they are the same bench.

That's also why support comes straight from the people who built the machine. Nothing is handed off to a distributor in between.

On the floor

Machines assembled on the NS CNC floor in Surrey, BC

Machines are assembled and run in-house — the same units that go to customers are tested on the floor first.

The people

The NS CNC team

A small team of designers, machinists, and engineers who build the machines and answer the phone when you call.

Process / Verification

Nothing ships until it's checked, inside and out.

Every machine runs the same pre-shipment sequence — mechanical, electronic, and motion — using the tools and procedures from our own product development.

Stage 01

Mechanical

  • Axis geometry verified to specification
  • Spindle runout confirmed under 1 micron
  • Components fitted and aligned, not adjusted after
Stage 02

Electronic

  • Control system tested end to end
  • Motor drives and wiring verified
  • Homing and limit sequences confirmed
Stage 03

Motion

  • Positional accuracy measured to spec
  • Test cuts run and inspected
  • Calibration recorded before the machine ships
History / Milestones

A quarter century of iteration.

Sixteen machines across roughly 25 years. Each generation built on the one before it.

Prototype X
~2000

Prototype X

First NS CNC mill — 4-axis with manual 5th axis

INGI 800
2008

INGI 800

First commercially sold machine

Mira 1
2009

Mira 1

First 5-axis desktop CNC mill for jewelry

Mira 2
2010

Mira 2

Waterproofing, refined design

Evoke
2011

Evoke

First multi-purpose mill / lathe hybrid

Mira 2E
2012

Mira 2E

Enclosed work area

Mira 3
2014

Mira 3

First machine with integrated CAM software

Mira X5
2016

Mira X5

Fully enclosed work area; expanded material range

Mira 6
2017

Mira 6

Smart Rotary Heads; redesigned interface

Mira X7
2018

Mira X7

5-axis with 12-tool automatic tool changer

Mira 6 (2020)
2020

Mira 6 (2020)

New control system, redesigned motion components

Mira 8
2021

Mira 8

Heavy-duty 5-axis for metals and composites

Elara
2021

Elara

3 & 4-axis line for metal milling

Mira 6S
2022

Mira 6S

9th generation Mira

Elara 2
2024

Elara 2

Redesigned frame; three E3000 spindle options; quick-release workholding

Mira J9
2025

Mira J9

5-axis heavy-duty · 15-tool ATC · dual coolant

Next Steps

The machines, the people running them, or a question.