POCONS USA
Scale, source, and distribute at volume

Full Production

Where volume happens: EMS and Tier-1 suppliers build at scale and source shielding hardware off qualified drawings, often through broadline distributors.

Arrow Electronics

North America
Distributor

Global distributor and supply-chain services for production electronics.

Centennial, CO, USAWebsite ↗

Celestica

North America
Volume EMS

Global EMS provider serving telecom, aerospace/defense, and data-center hardware.

Toronto, ON, CanadaWebsite ↗

Digi-Key Electronics

North America
Distributor

Broadline distributor stocking catalog board-level shields and EMI hardware.

Thief River Falls, MN, USAWebsite ↗

Flex

North America
Volume EMS

Global EMS provider with North American and Mexico-border manufacturing.

Austin, TX, USAWebsite ↗

Jabil

North America
Volume EMS

Global electronics manufacturing services provider; high-volume PCBA and box-build across many industries.

St. Petersburg, FL, USAWebsite ↗

Mouser Electronics

North America
Distributor

Broadline distributor of EMI shielding components and RF hardware.

Mansfield, TX, USAWebsite ↗

Sanmina

North America
Volume EMSTier-1 supplier

Global EMS with defense/aerospace and medical lines; complex PCBA and systems.

San Jose, CA, USAWebsite ↗

TE Connectivity

Shield-can maker

Board-level shielding product family for high-volume programs.

Schaffhausen, SwitzerlandWebsite ↗

TTI, Inc.

North America
Distributor

Specialty distributor of passives, connectors, and EMI/EMC components.

Fort Worth, TX, USAWebsite ↗

Würth Elektronik

Shield-can makerDistributor

WE-SHC catalog board-level shielding, distributed at volume.

Waldenburg, GermanyWebsite ↗

Building shielding into your design?

POCONS tools board-level shield cans to your footprint — IATF 16949, stocked and supported domestically.

Company names and trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Listing is a neutral industry reference under nominative fair use and does not imply affiliation or endorsement. Read the supply-chain guide →