About Jason Mach
Jason Mach specializes in excavator attachments and custom machinery manufacturing for global customers. Including intelligent painting/assembly lines, balloon printing machines, brick & wall panel production lines and OEM equipment.
Innovation drives our growth. We hold 12 approved and pending patents, building a solid technical foundation in mechanical design and automation. Supported by sound intellectual property and steady business performance, we qualify for national high-tech enterprise accreditation and are actively advancing the application process.
Machinery making is more than a trade to us. We uphold our core values: Be bold, dream big, stay curious. This mindset helps us solve technical challenges and continuously improve our custom manufacturing capacity.
Our promise: BUILT TOUGH, BUILT FOR YOUR NEEDS
All products adopt premium materials and undergo strict inspections, boasting durable quality and steady performance under harsh working conditions. We tailor equipment to fit clients’ actual operational needs. With competitive pricing and high cost-effectiveness, our affordable solutions create tangible value for global partners.

Products
Excavator Attachments
Brick & Wall Panel Production Line
Multi-Function Manipulator
Balloon Printing Machine
Custom Machinery
News Room
-
Founder of Jason Mach, Jason Huang Yingdong shares his 20-year journey in non-standard machinery, eco-friendly lightweight brick production lines and agricultural equipment
-
Reprinted and adapted for an international audience.Ninghua, Sanming, Fujian, China A newly deployed excavator-mounted round hedge trimmer has officially entered service for highway greening maintenance in Ninghua, delivering a major leap in operational efficiency and trimming quality for local road management. The Ninghua Highway Branch manages 166.327 kilometers of national and provincial trunk roads, plus around 180 kilometers of rural roads. Large numbers of shrub balls planted along the roads require trimming 2 to 3 times per year. Traditionally, the work was completed manually by maintenance workers with handheld chainsaws and electric saws, resulting in inconsistent shapes and sizes, low productivity, and physical strain on workers. To address these challenges, the local highway department launched a mechanical upgrading initiative. After half a year of field testin...
Write us
Working on something? Drop us a line, we’ll get back to you soon.
We respect your privacy and will never share your information with third parties.



