Surface Finishing Guide

Surface Finishing Customization for Manufacturing Parts

Compare injection molding, CNC machining, and 3D printing surface finishes by cost, durability, appearance, and application fit — so your parts meet both functional requirements and esthetic expectations, from prototype to production.

Best cosmetic finishSPI A-2/A-3 polish for high-gloss consumer products, lenses, and visible appliance surfaces.
Best durable finishAnodizing (Type II/III) for aluminum wear parts or electroless nickel for corrosion-prone steel.
Best budget finishAs-machined or SPI B-3 for functional parts where tool marks are acceptable and cost matters.
Best textured finishVDI 24-36 mold texturing or sand blasting for grip surfaces, matte appearance, and hiding flow lines.

A surface finish is not an afterthought — it is a functional specification

The right finish can mean the difference between a part that sells and a part that fails. It determines whether a medical device survives 100 autoclave cycles, whether an automotive trim piece retains color after five summers, and whether a bearing surface lasts 10,000 or 100,000 cycles.

From mirror-polished SPI A-1 for optical clarity to coarse VDI textures for grip, the range of options is vast. This page organizes every surface finishing method available at our facility — organized by manufacturing process, cost tier, and industry requirement — so buyers and engineers can match finish to function before production begins.

Various surface finishes on manufactured parts including polished anodized and textured samples
Every surface finish serves at least one of three goals: protection, appearance, or performance.

Injection Molding Surface Finishes

Mold finishes transfer directly to the part surface. Choosing the right SPI or VDI grade at the mold design stage avoids costly rework and ensures consistent appearance across production runs.

Finish Method Process & Typical Use Cost Level Durabilidad Lo mejor para
SPI Polish (A1-A3) Diamond or stone polish; mirror to high-gloss Alta Mold only, part is raw plastic Optical lenses, cosmetic covers, transparent parts
SPI Stone (B1-B3) Fine to coarse stone; semi-gloss to matte Medio Mold only Consumer electronics, appliance housings
SPI Sandpaper (C1-C3) Fine to coarse sandpaper; satin textures Medio Mold only Industrial covers, general-purpose enclosures
SPI Blast (D1-D3) Glass bead or oxide blast; fine to coarse texture Low-Medium Mold only Textured grips, matte surfaces, hiding weld lines
VDI 12-45 EDM textured surface; uniform matte patterns Medio Mold only Automotive interiors, durable goods, consistent textures
Printing (Silk/Pad/Transfer) Post-mold decoration; logos, text, graphics Bajo Moderate, dependent on ink adhesion Branding, UI labels, regulatory markings
Painting & Powder Coating Spray or electrostatic application + curing Medium-High High, weather and chip resistant Color matching, UV protection, automotive exterior
Laser Engraving Contactless permanent marking; serial numbers, barcodes Bajo Permanent Traceability, branding, precise graphics on plastics
Electroplating (Plastics) Metallization of plastic surface; chrome, nickel, copper Medium-High Alta Automotive trim, plumbing fixtures, premium cosmetics
IMD / IML Film insert molded during injection; decoration + protection Medio Very high, sealed under clear film Consumer electronics, automotive interior panels
Mold finish tip: SPI finishes are graded by the mold surface, not the part. A mirror-polished A-1 mold produces a mirror-gloss part — but only if the resin flows well enough to replicate it. Low-viscosity materials like PC and PMMA reproduce polish best; glass-filled grades may need one grade coarser.

CNC Machining Surface Finishes

CNC surfaces start as-machined and can be upgraded through mechanical, chemical, or coating processes. The target Ra value, material type, and post-processing sequence determine what is achievable — and at what cost.

As Machined

Standard finish with visible tool marks; Ra 0.8–3.2 µm depending on feeds, speeds, and tool condition.

No added costFastest lead time

Granallado

Uniform matte texture by propelling glass beads or oxide media. Masks tool marks and prepares for coating.

Consistent matteDeburrs edges

Anodizing (Type II / III)

Electrochemical oxide layer on aluminum; Type II for cosmetic and general use, Type III for hardcoat wear resistance.

Corrosion resistantColor options

Electropolishing

Reverse electroplating that removes surface peaks to achieve Ra down to 0.1 µm. Ideal for stainless steel medical and food-contact parts.

Ultra-smoothDeburrs micro-edges

Recubrimiento en polvo

Electrostatic dry powder cured into a thick (50–150 µm) protective layer. Excellent for outdoor and industrial equipment.

Thick & toughWide color range

Brushed & Polished

Mechanical brushing for satin directional finish or progressive polishing to mirror finish. Common on stainless steel and aluminum trim.

DecorativeRa <0.4 µm possible

CNC machined parts with different surface finishes from as-machined to mirror polish

SPI Mold Finish Standards — Complete Grade Reference

The Society of the Plastics Industry (SPI) defines 12 standard mold finish grades across four categories. These are universally referenced in mold specifications and should be specified on every injection molding drawing.

SPI Grade Process Method Surface Roughness Ra (µm) Appearance Aplicaciones típicas
A-1 Grade #3 diamond buff 0.012 – 0.025 Mirror finish Optical lenses, reflectors, transparent medical parts
A-2 Grade #6 diamond buff 0.025 – 0.050 High polish Transparent covers, cosmetic enclosures, light guides
A-3 Grade #15 diamond buff 0.050 – 0.100 Gloss polish Consumer electronics, high-end appliance panels
B-1 600-grit paper 0.050 – 0.100 Fine semi-gloss General aesthetic parts, medium-gloss enclosures
B-2 400-grit paper 0.100 – 0.150 Medium semi-gloss Standard enclosures, functional visible parts
B-3 320-grit paper 0.280 – 0.320 Matte semi-gloss Industrial housings, non-visible structural parts
C-1 600-grit stone 0.350 – 0.400 Fine satin Commercial products, texture-preference surfaces
C-2 400-grit stone 0.450 – 0.550 Medium satin Budget enclosures, internal structural components
C-3 320-grit stone 0.630 – 0.700 Coarse satin Functional parts where finish is not critical
D-1 Dry blast glass bead #11 0.800 – 1.000 Fine texture Grip surfaces, matte industrial parts, paint-ready
D-2 Dry blast #240 oxide 1.000 – 2.800 Medium texture Tool handles, equipment panels, anti-glare
D-3 Dry blast #24 oxide 3.200 – 18.000 Coarse texture Non-slip flooring, maximum grip, heavy texture

3D Printing Post-Processing Finishes

Additive parts typically exhibit visible layer lines and limited material color options. Post-processing transforms a raw print into a functional or presentation-ready component.

Vapor Smoothing

Chemical vapor exposure (acetone for ABS, specialized solvents for PA12) melts surface peaks to create a sealed, glossy surface without adding thickness. Reduces Ra by 60-80%.

Sealed surfaceWatertight

Sanding & Priming

Progressive grit sanding (180 → 400 → 800) followed by filler primer eliminates layer lines. Standard preparation path before painting for display models and consumer prototypes.

Paint-readySmooth touch

Metal Plating (3DP)

Electroless nickel or copper plating on SLA or SLS nylon parts adds 25–75 µm of metal for EMI shielding, wear resistance, and metallic appearance without metal tooling.

ConductiveMetallic look

Surface Finishing by Industry

Medical Devices: Electropolished stainless steel (Ra <0.5 µm) for surgical instruments; plasma-treated plastics for biocompatibility; validated for autoclave, EtO, and gamma sterilization cycles.
Automóvil: Two-component PU coatings for exterior UV durability; PVD chrome-look finishes for interior trim; bead-blasted textures for under-hood components; powder coating for chassis parts.
Consumer Electronics: Anodized aluminum (Type II, dyed) for device housings; SPI A-2/A-3 polished molds for cosmetic plastic covers; laser-etched branding and regulatory marks.
Aerospace: Alodine chromate conversion coating for aluminum corrosion protection; Type III hardcoat anodizing for wear surfaces; shot peening for fatigue life improvement on structural components.
Industrial Equipment: Black oxide on steel for mild corrosion resistance; powder coating for outdoor machinery; electroless nickel for chemical plant and food-processing components.
Consumer Products: IMD/IML for durable decoration on appliances; SPI D-2 textured grip surfaces for tools; silk-screen and pad printing for product labeling and instructions.

How to choose the right surface finish

Use these three filters to narrow down finishes before locking specifications on a drawing or RFQ.

Define the primary requirement

Is the finish cosmetic, protective, or functional? A mirror polish is a cosmetic choice; anodizing is protective; electropolishing for food-contact is functional. One finish can serve multiple goals — prioritize the most critical one.

Match to material and process

Not every finish works on every material. Aluminum anodizes beautifully; steel does not. Injection molded parts inherit the mold finish; CNC parts need separate post-processing. Check compatibility before committing.

Balance cost, volume, and tolerance

A hand-polished A-1 mold costs more than a bead-blasted D-2. For 500 parts the premium may be justified; for 5,000 the per-unit math changes. Also consider: some finishing processes add thickness (powder coat: ~75 µm), affecting tight-tolerance fits.

Finish Cost and Lead Time Comparison

Relative comparison across common finishing methods. Exact costs depend on part geometry, batch size, and material. Use this as a selection starting point, not a quote.

As MachinedIncluded in CNC

No added lead time

Granallado$

+1–2 days

Anodizado$$

+3–5 days

Recubrimiento en polvo$$

+3–7 days

Brushing$

+1–3 days

SPI A Polish$$$

Mold: +5–10 days

Galvanoplastia$$$

+5–10 days

Electropolish$$$

+5–7 days

Cost note: Mold finishes (SPI A-D, VDI) are one-time costs applied to the tool. Per-part cost is effectively zero for the mold texture itself. Post-molding processes (painting, plating, laser) add per-part cost. For volumes above 5,000, mold-texture solutions are almost always more economical than post-processing.

Preguntas frecuentes

How do I specify a surface finish on my drawing?

The most reliable way is to include three pieces of information: (1) the SPI/VDI grade or Ra value, (2) the process method expected, and (3) which surfaces need the finish. Example: “SPI B-1 on cavity side only” or “Ra 0.8 µm max, electropolish, all external surfaces.” Callouts like “smooth” or “nice finish” are ambiguous and lead to rework — always use standard grades.

What SPI finish should I use for a clear plastic lens?

SPI A-1 or A-2 mirror polish is the standard for transparent optical parts. The mold steel itself must be capable of taking a mirror finish — typically 420 stainless or H13 with high polish rating. Material choice matters equally: PC and PMMA reproduce polish well; nylon and PP will never achieve the same clarity regardless of mold finish. Pre-hardened P20 can generally reach B-2 but struggles below B-1.

Does anodizing change part dimensions?

Yes, and this catches many first-time designers. Type II anodizing builds ~50% of the coating thickness outward and ~50% inward into the aluminum surface. A typical 10 µm coating adds roughly 5 µm to the surface. Type III hardcoat can build 25–50 µm per side. If your part has press-fit or bearing tolerances, specify pre-anodize machining allowance (typically 0.025–0.050 mm diametral) on the drawing.

Can you match a specific color across different materials and finishes?

Color matching across materials is challenging but achievable within defined tolerances. Anodized aluminum, painted plastic, and powder-coated steel will never be identical under every light source due to different surface physics. For consumer products, we recommend a master color chip agreed upon by all stakeholders, with a delta E tolerance of ≤1.5 for critical cosmetic surfaces. For functional parts, batch-to-batch consistency within ≤3.0 delta E is standard.

Need a surface finish recommendation for your parts?

Send your drawing, 3D file, or even a photo of the look you want. We will suggest the most practical finishing path — balancing appearance, durability, lead time, and per-unit cost for your specific volume.

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