SIOUX FALLS, S.D.– Diamond Mowers is opening its factory doors to show how American-built equipment goes from raw steel to jobsite-ready performance that goes beyond the “Made in the USA” label. Through a behind-the-scenes look at its Sioux Falls manufacturing operation, the company highlights the people, processes and quality standards that have shaped its mowing and vegetation management equipment for more than 25 years.

“At Diamond Mowers, ‘Made in the USA’ isn’t just a label. It’s a promise,” said Nate Cleveringa, vice president of engineering and product management. “It means a commitment to engineering equipment that performs in the toughest conditions because it’s made by people who understand the demands of the job firsthand.”

From Midwest-sourced steel to final testing, craftsmanship and performance come together to provide equipment that contractors and municipalities trust.

From Midwest Steel to Jobsite Performance

Long before a machine reaches the field, the work begins. It starts with steel sourced primarily from Midwest suppliers and chosen for its durability and consistency. From there, precision and purpose guide every step inside Diamond’s Sioux Falls, S.D., facility:

  1. Precision Cutting: Teams feed large sheets of steel through advanced laser cutting systems that run up to 22 hours a day. This ensures each component meets exact specifications, forming the foundation for consistent attachment performance and fit.
  2. Fabrication and Forming: Once cut, workers bend and shape components into the structural elements that define each attachment. This stage is critical for strength, balance, and long-term durability.
  3. Welding and Structural Integrity: Skilled welders then bring parts together, reinforcing key stress points and confirming the structural integrity required for demanding applications like mulching, mowing, and right-of-way clearing.
  4. Finishing and Protection: Each piece is painted and coated for protection against corrosion, wear, and the kind of day-in, day-out demands Diamond equipment is built to handle.
  5. Assembly: Components come together into the final product: fully functional attachments and machines, with careful attention to fit, alignment, and system integration.
  6. Testing and Evaluation: Before any unit leaves the facility, it undergoes a run and evaluation process to confirm performance, reliability, and readiness for real-world use.
  7. Delivery to the Field: From initial steel processing to final shipment, the full build cycle typically takes one-and-a-half to two months, reflecting a deliberate approach that prioritizes quality and performance over shortcuts.

“The meticulous oversight our team displays throughout this manufacturing process pays off where it matters most: performance in the field,” added Cleveringa.

Where Build Quality Pays Off

For professionals in vegetation management, roadside maintenance, and land clearing, equipment failure amounts to lost time, lost revenue, and increased risk. Industry estimates show unplanned equipment downtime can cost contractors hundreds of dollars per hour, underscoring the importance of reliable machines that perform consistently under pressure.

Because it manages fabrication and assembly domestically, Diamond can keep a tighter grip on materials, production, and quality standards. It also shortens the distance between engineering, manufacturing, and customer support, so that what crews experience on the job can quickly shape what gets built next. Just as important, this process supports the workforce behind the work. Every machine represents the effort of employees who take pride in what they build and how it will be used.

A Larger Footprint in the Field

Over time, Diamond’s strategic focus on high performance, from fabrication to the field, has translated into measurable growth and a broader footprint across the industry. For more than 25 years, the company steadily expanded its reach while staying grounded in the same principles that built its reputation in the first place:

  • 40,000+ units sold across a wide range of vegetation management applications
  • 300+ dealers supporting customers across the world
  • 25+ government contracts, reflecting long-term trust from municipalities and public agencies

This scale matters for customers because it means access to equipment, parts, and expertise, all backed by a network that understands the complexity of the job.

The work ahead will keep changing as demands on equipment continue to grow, from clearing rights-of-way and managing invasive species to maintaining infrastructure and reclaiming land. The one thing that won’t change? Diamond’s commitment to meet those needs by manufacturing reliable, purpose-driven equipment backed by people who stand behind it.

“The promise behind ‘Made in the USA’ isn’t just part of our story; it’s the foundation of it,” said Cleveringa.

For more information, visit www.diamondmowers.com or email info@diamondmowers.com.


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