SWTOR Armormech Crafting Guide

Star Wars: The Old Republic has 6 different crafting skills you can choose from: Armormech, Artifice, Armstech, Synthweaving, Cybertech and Biochem. In this video, we’ll be going over how to start Armormech crafting, how to level up your Armormech crew skill and unlock more crafting schematics, and lastly, we’ll be going over some of the cool things you can craft with Armormech at higher levels.

Armormech Crafting Materials Guide

This Armormech materials guide is paired with this crafting guide.

Basics of Armormech Crafting

You can start crafting after you’ve completed your first planet, at around level 10 or higher. There’s no penalty to starting late though, so if you want to save crafting for later, carry on following your purple quests and enjoying your class story.

How to Start Armormech

To choose a crafting skill, you’ll want to go to the Strongholds & Crew Skills section of the Fleet. If you’ve forgotten how to get to the Fleet, press P on your keyboard. In the General tab of your abilities there’s a useful ability called Emergency Fleet Pass. Once you are on the Fleet, open the map with the M key and look for the Strongholds & Crew Skills section. To pick up Armormech as your crafting skill, speak to the Armormech trainer in the rooms on the outer edge of the station. The room with crafting trainers in it is marked with a holographic sign with the shape of a gear or cog hanging over the room.

Matching Crew Skills

The two gathering crew skills that go with Armormech crafting are Underworld Trading and Scavenging, which allow you to gather the materials to craft Armormech items, so go speak to the Underworld Trading and Scavenging trainers in the next room, which is marked by the symbol of a hologram star.

 

Free-to-play and Preferred Accounts: If you are on a free-to-play account, you can only choose one crew skill per character, so you might instead take Armormech on one character, and Scavenging on another and have them work together, for a total of four character per server. If you’re a former subscriber, you’ll have two crew skill slots available, and if you’re a subscriber you naturally have 3 crew skill slots unlocked per character, so you can take all three complementary crew skills, Scavenging, Underworld Trading and Armormech all on one character. The other major difference if you are not a subscriber  you will only be able to queue one crafted item up at a time – as a subscriber, you can set your companion to craft five items in a row.

How to Start Crafting with Armormech

Once you’ve picked your crafting and gathering skills, press the B key on your keyboard to open the crew skills window. You can also find crafting in the main menu labelled as Crew Skills, under a symbol of a triangle.

You start out at crafting level 0, and you’ll unlock more crafting recipes, known as schematics, from the Armormech trainer as you level up your crafting level.

You can click the Armormech icon from the crafting panel to open the crafting schematics window which shows everything you have available to craft – when you chose Armormech as a crew skill, you also received some basic schematics to help get you started, including some basc armr pieces, and most importantly, something called an Assembly Component.

 Armormech icon

Your goal as an Armormechnist will be to craft basic items to level up your Armormech skill level, which will then unlock more schematics.

The most basic part of Armormech crafting will be crafting different types of Assembly Components.

Components
Desh Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Bronzium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Phobium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Bondite Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Electrum Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Durasteel Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Mythra Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Farium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Polished Aluminium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Polished Plasteel Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Infused Plasteel Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Premium Fibrolite Armor Processor material, from Patch Premium Duranium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Prototype Fibrolite Armor Processor material, from Patch Prototype Duranium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch Artifact Fibrolite Armor Processor material, from Patch Artifact Duranium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch

We’ll start by crafting a Desh Armor Assembly Component, one of the default schematics you got when you chose Armormech, which once you click it will tell you it requires 2 x Silica, 2 x Desh, and 2 x Conductive Flux to craft. So where do you get those crafting materials?

Since this is Armormech, the materials will likely come from either Scavenging or Underworld Trading, Armormech’s two complementary skills. To figure out which gathering skill the materials you will need come from, hover over the listed material. When you look at the tooltip by hovering over them, The Silica is listed as Grade 1 Scavenged Component and the Desh is Grade 1 Scavenged Metal – both of which come from Scavenging.

The simplest way to get materials for your first item is to open up your Scavenging missions, and send your companions out to get the materials listed in the mission descriptions.

White-bordered materials are a bit different – you can either send your companions to gather them if you have a mission available for them, or buy them directly from a vendor called the Crew Skills Trade Vendor in the Strongholds & Crew Skills section of the fleet who sells them pretty cheap.

Once you have all the materials you need, go back to your Assembly Component schematic for Armormech, and click craft on the bottom right, and your companion will start crafting. Once your companion is finished crafting your schematic, the item will show up in your inventory and your crafting level will go up.

Assembly Components are the building blocks of Armormech crafting – while they’re pretty useless on their own, you can combine them with other materials to craft actual items. The first piece of equipment you can craft when you start Armormech is a belt or set of bracers, which requires 4 pieces of  Terenthium which is a Grade 1 Underworld Metal from Underworld Trading, combined with two of the Desh Armor Assembly Components we crafted earlier. Crafting Assembly Components, then combining them with other materials, is how you craft almost every Armormech item in the game.

Where to Get Armormech Materials

There’s a lot of different ways to get materials for Armormech, including Scavenged Metal and Scavenged Compounds from Scavenging, and Underworld Metals from Underworld Trading.

Armormech Crafting Materials Guide


Armormech Leveling Guide

Now that you understand the basics of Armormech crafting, let’s cover how to level up your Armormech crew skill.

Crafting low-level schematics won’t help you level up your crafting skill after the first few items you craft – you must craft more difficult items over time, and the easiest way to see if a crafting a schematic will raise your crafting level is by looking at the colors of the dot beside the schematic in the schematics window – if it’s grey, you won’t gain any crafting levels by crafting it, and crafting orange items will give you the biggest boost your crafting level, so whenever possible craft an orange dot item, followed by a yellow dot item if you don’t have one, then a green dot, and don’t even bother crafting any gray dot items for levelling. The exact number of points you get from each color is a bit weird, with orange giving around 3-4, yellow 2-3, green 1, and gray 0. Gathering missions work the exact same way.

The number on the left of the schematic name is supposed to represent how may of that item you can craft, but it doesn’t always update, so just close the window and re-open it if you need an updated count.

Fun Tip – if you open your crafting window, you can drag and drop your crafting skill icon at the very top down on to your quickbars, and then you can open it from there if you need it!

Assembly Components

When most players are levelling up, they focus on crafting Assembly Components whenever possible, even if the Assembly Component schematic has turned from orange to yellow to green. You can get a new Assembly Component schematic from the Armormech trainer roughly every 50 Armormech levels, and a sign that it’s time to go get a new Assembly Component schematic from the trainer is that your last Assembly Component has turned green (or gray) in your schematics panel. Here’s the list of levels where you can check back at the trainer for a new schematic:

IconMaterial NameSkillGradeTypeNotes
Desh Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 4.0.0Desh Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 1Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 1
Bronzium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 4.0.0Bronzium Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 2Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 80
Phobium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 4.0.0Phobium Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 3Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 160
Bondite Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 4.0.0Bondite Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 4Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 240
Electrum Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 4.0.0Electrum Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 5Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 300
Durasteel Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 4.0.0Durasteel Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 6Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 350
Mythra Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 4.0.0Mythra Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 7Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 400
Farium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 4.0.0Farium Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 8Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 450
Polished Aluminium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 4.1.0Polished Aluminium Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 9Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 500
Polished Plasteel Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 5.0.0Polished Plasteel Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 10Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 550
Infused Plasteel Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 5.2.0Infused Plasteel Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 10Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 600
Premium Fibrolite Armor Processor material, from Patch 6.0.0Premium Fibrolite Armor ProcessorArmormechGrade 11Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 600
Premium Duranium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 6.0.0Premium Duranium Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 11Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 600
Prototype Fibrolite Armor Processor material, from Patch 6.0.0Prototype Fibrolite Armor ProcessorArmormechGrade 11Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 620
Prototype Duranium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 6.0.0Prototype Duranium Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 11Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 620
Artifact Fibrolite Armor Processor material, from Patch 6.0.0Artifact Fibrolite Armor ProcessorArmormechGrade 11Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 640
Artifact Duranium Armor Assembly Component material, from Patch 6.0.0Artifact Duranium Armor Assembly ComponentArmormechGrade 11Component
  • Info: Armormech lvl 640

If you’d like an easy to follow list of items to craft to level up Armormech efficiently, please visit TORCommunity’s Armormech Leveling Guide 1-700! I love this guide for leveling up fast.

What to do with crafted items while leveling crafting?

Apart from using them to craft finished items, there are two other things you can do with the Assembly Components you craft. The first is to Deconstruct it – this will break it down in to its parts, and you’ll receive back some of the materials you put in to crafting it. This is useful to recoup materials if you are trying to quickly level up your crew skills and don’t have lots of materials on hand.

The final thing you can do with it is sell it – Assembly Components usually sell for decent prices, as crafters can buy them to save time crafting specific items they want, and many types of Assembly Components are also used in high-stakes Conquest crafting. To sell crafted items to other players, you can go to the Fleet, and go to the Galactic Trade Market section of the map. Once there, right click the big green terminal, and then click in the search box.

SHIFT+LEFT CLICK on the item from your inventory that you want to sell, and then click the search button and sort by price with lowest to highest. This will give you an idea of what the item is selling for – if you want to keep things easy, you’ll price your item slightly lower than the lowest listed price per item. Once you are ready to sell your item to other players, right click it from your inventory with the GTN, the Galactic Trade Network open, and it will bring up the sell panel where you can set the price – don’t forget that if you have two to sell, you’ll want to double your listing price. Some items, like Assembly Components, are easy to sell, while other items, like finished lightsabers, may not have much demand. What sells well and what doesn’t fluctuates with the game’s updates and your server’s economy, and finding a niche to make credits in requires some research. For lower level Armormech crafting, players can look in to crafting and selling mainly Assembly Components or visually appealing cosmetic armor sets.

What can Armormech Craft?

Now let’s cover some of the cool stuff you’ll be able to craft as you level up Armormech.

armormechs primarily craft armor sets for Jedi and for Sith. The main reason to craft them is for cosmetic reasons, as you can wear them in your Outfit Designer even if they’re technically meant for low-level characters, if you like the look. Some players also like to craft themselves armor to use as they level, with a new set waiting for them in their bank every few levels – this isn’t necessary, but can be fun to do.

You can get crafting schematics three different ways – straight from the Armormech crew skill trainer once you reach the correct level, from the GTN and some gathering skills like Underworld Trading, and from reverse engineering items you have crafted.

Armors from the Trainer

We’ll start with the easiest schematics, which come straight from the Armormech trainer as you level up your Armormech crew skill. If you want to see what’s coming up for schematics from the Armormech trainer, you can open the window where you buy new schematics, then choose “All” from the dropdown on the top right of the panel. By default, it will only show you ones that you can actually buy right now based on your Armormech level.


Armors from Schematics

There are also many schematics available that aren’t from the trainer. These Armormech schematics can be found as random rewards dropped from enemies, from gathering skills, and bought on the GTN from other players. The most common way to obtain these schematics is from the Underworld Trading crew skill, and players often sell them on the GTN.


Armors from Reverse Engineer

When you deconstruct an item you have crafted yourself, you may have a chance of learning an upgraded version of that schematic. You can see if an item has an upgraded version when you roll over it in your inventory with the deconstruct tool.

For some crafting skills, like Synthweavers and Armormechs, deconstructing an item can give you a different version of the item with a different look, and there are some cool hidden armors you can craft using reverse engineering.


Decorations

All crew skills can also craft decorations. Armormechs, Armstechs, and Cybertechs  can craft Industrial Decorations, including things like furniture, crates, and computer terminals. There are four different types of Industrial prefabs, and they become available at Armormech level 150, 300, 450, and 500.

There are also Universal Prefabs, which are a combination of an Industrial prefab, a Synthetic prefab which is created by Artificers, Synthweavers and Biochemists, a Fabricator Crystal and a Fabricator Design, the last two any crafting profession can craft. Universal Prefab decorations include all kinds of cool decorations like fountains, statues, walls, furniture, and useful items like cargo holds.

On top of that, there are also War Supply decorations, which are also a combination from multiple crafting professions, of which Armormech can contribute to. These include giant crystal formations, statues, and lots of other strange decos.

Lastly, all crafting professions can craft the expensive Dark Project decorations, which include ship decorations.

If you want to craft your own decorations, please visit my How to Craft Decorations guide.

IconMaterial NameSkillGradeTypeNotes
Dark Project MK-1 material, from Patch 2.9.0Dark Project MK-1StrongholdsDecorations
  • Used for: Dark Projects can be turned in for decorations crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 150
Fabricator Crystal MK-1 material, from Patch 2.9.0Fabricator Crystal MK-1StrongholdsGrade 1Decorations
  • Used for: Fabricator Crystals are only used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 150
Fabricator Design MK-1 material, from Patch 2.9.0Fabricator Design MK-1StrongholdsGrade 1Decorations
  • Used for: Fabricator Designs are only used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 150
Industrial Prefab MK-1 material, from Patch 2.9.0Industrial Prefab MK-1StrongholdsGrade 1Decorations
  • Used for: Industrial Prefabs can be turned in for decorations or used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: Armormech, Armstech and Cybertech level 150
Synthetic Prefab MK-1 material, from Patch 2.9.0Synthetic Prefab MK-1StrongholdsGrade 1Decorations
  • Used for: Synthetic Prefabs can be turned in for decorations or used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: Synthweavering, Artifice and Biochem level 150
Universal Prefab MK-1 material, from Patch 2.9.0Universal Prefab MK-1StrongholdsGrade 1Decorations
  • Used for: Universal Prefabs can be turned in for decorations crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 150
Fabricator Crystal MK-2 material, from Patch 2.9.0Fabricator Crystal MK-2StrongholdsGrade 2Decorations
  • Used for: Fabricator Crystals are only used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 300
Fabricator Design MK-2 material, from Patch 2.9.0Fabricator Design MK-2StrongholdsGrade 2Decorations
  • Used for: Fabricator Designs are only used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 300
Industrial Prefab MK-2 material, from Patch 2.9.0Industrial Prefab MK-2StrongholdsGrade 2Decorations
  • Used for: Industrial Prefabs can be turned in for decorations or used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: Armormech, Armstech and Cybertech level 300
Synthetic Prefab MK-2 material, from Patch 2.9.0Synthetic Prefab MK-2StrongholdsGrade 2Decorations
  • Used for: Synthetic Prefabs can be turned in for decorations or used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: Synthweavering, Artifice and Biochem level 300
Universal Prefab MK-2 material, from Patch 2.9.0Universal Prefab MK-2StrongholdsGrade 2Decorations
  • Used for: Universal Prefabs can be turned in for decorations crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 300
Fabricator Crystal MK-3 material, from Patch 2.9.0Fabricator Crystal MK-3StrongholdsGrade 3Decorations
  • Used for: Fabricator Crystals are only used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 450
Fabricator Design MK-3 material, from Patch 2.9.0Fabricator Design MK-3StrongholdsGrade 3Decorations
  • Used for: Fabricator Designs are only used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 450
Industrial Prefab MK-3 material, from Patch 2.9.0Industrial Prefab MK-3StrongholdsGrade 3Decorations
  • Used for: Industrial Prefabs can be turned in for decorations or used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: Armormech, Armstech and Cybertech level 450
Synthetic Prefab MK-3 material, from Patch 2.9.0Synthetic Prefab MK-3StrongholdsGrade 3Decorations
  • Used for: Synthetic Prefabs can be turned in for decorations or used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: Synthweavering, Artifice and Biochem level 450
Universal Prefab MK-3 material, from Patch 2.9.0Universal Prefab MK-3StrongholdsGrade 3Decorations
  • Used for: Universal Prefabs can be turned in for decorations crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 450
Fabricator Crystal MK-4 material, from Patch 5.9.2Fabricator Crystal MK-4StrongholdsGrade 4Decorations
  • Used for: Fabricator Crystals are only used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 500
Fabricator Design MK-4 material, from Patch 5.9.2Fabricator Design MK-4StrongholdsGrade 4Decorations
  • Used for: Fabricator Designs are only used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 500
Industrial Prefab MK-4 material, from Patch 5.9.2Industrial Prefab MK-4StrongholdsGrade 4Decorations
  • Used for: Industrial Prefabs MK-4 can only be used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: Armormech, Armstech and Cybertech level 500
Synthetic Prefab MK-4 material, from Patch 5.9.2Synthetic Prefab MK-4StrongholdsGrade 4Decorations
  • Used for: Synthetic Prefabs MK-4 can only be used to craft Universal Prefabs crafting
  • Info: Synthweavering, Artifice and Biochem level 500
Universal Prefab MK-4 material, from Patch 5.9.2Universal Prefab MK-4StrongholdsGrade 4Decorations
  • Used for: Universal Prefabs can be turned in for decorations crafting
  • Info: All crafting skills level 500

High-Level Equipment

Unfortunately, at the current max-level of 80, there’s no way to craft level 80 gear. You will see a lot of level 75 gear available to craft from the previous expansion, but there’s not much reason to craft it.

Augments

Armormechs craft Augment Kits, Absorb Augments, Accuracy Augments, Alacrity Augments or click here for the ridiculously expensive Superior 77 augments.

SWTOR Augments Guide