Vector Industries, Inc., a domestic manufacturer of water treatment equipment, announced that its chemical bypass feeders continue to ship from in-stock inventory, with backorders arising only on rare occasions and resolving within one week when they occur. The announcement comes amid ongoing supply chain disruptions that have extended lead times for water treatment equipment across the industry, with suppliers relying on overseas components or third-party distribution networks reporting delays stretching several weeks or more.
These longer lead times, tied to overseas production and port congestion, have prompted many buyers to scrutinize equipment origins. Vector Industries notes that maintaining production close to its customer base has allowed the company to hold fulfillment timelines steady, even as broader industry lead times have become less predictable. The company attributes its consistent availability to a domestic manufacturing model that keeps design, production, and fulfillment under one roof at its Waukesha facility.
Vector builds its chemical bypass feeders from materials held on hand rather than waiting on imported parts, a practice that reduces the number of points at which a single shipment delay can hold up a finished unit. "We keep chemical bypass feeders in stock so customers aren't left waiting on a project deadline," said Dave Dolensek, Vice President of Vector Industries. "When a delay does happen, it's uncommon, and it's resolved within a week rather than turning into an open-ended backorder."
All Vector Industries equipment is manufactured at the company's Waukesha, Wisconsin facility using U.S.-sourced steel. Keeping both materials and labor domestic gives the company direct oversight of its own production schedule, rather than depending on international shipping networks that have been a recurring source of delay for others in the water treatment equipment sector. For water treatment professionals managing facility maintenance windows, regulatory deadlines, or construction schedules, equipment availability can directly affect a project's timeline, and Vector says its current inventory position is designed to give procurement teams a more predictable supplier to plan around.
Additional information on the company's chemical bypass feeders is available through Vector Industries, Inc.. The company's in-stock position contrasts with industry trends where lead time pressures have not affected its stock levels, ensuring that most orders ship from stock and rare delays are capped at one week.


