CNC Materials Guide

CNC Machining Materials for Precision Parts

Compare metals and engineering plastics by strength, machinability, wear resistance, temperature capability, weight, and cost—so your CNC parts are easier to quote, machine, inspect, and use in production.

Best all-round metalAluminum 6061 for prototypes, fixtures, housings, and lightweight structural parts.
Best wear plasticNylon or POM for gears, bushings, rollers, sliding parts, and low-friction components.
Best high-temperature plasticPEEK or PTFE when heat, chemicals, or demanding service conditions matter.
Best precision choicePOM and aluminum machine cleanly and hold stable dimensions for tight-tolerance parts.

Choose CNC materials by function, not just by name

A material that looks strong on a datasheet may still machine poorly, warp after stress relief, absorb moisture, or drive up cycle time. The practical choice depends on load, tolerance, surface finish, operating environment, inspection requirements, and volume.

For early prototypes, machinability and fast delivery often matter most. For production parts, durability, dimensional stability, repeatability, and total cost become more important. This page helps you compare common CNC machining materials in a buyer-friendly way before sending drawings for quotation.

Engineer selecting CNC machining materials with CAD drawing and material samples
Material selection should match function, tolerance, environment, and production volume.

Engineering plastics for CNC machining

Plastics are often selected when parts need lower weight, electrical insulation, corrosion resistance, low friction, or quieter operation than metal components.

Engineering plastic materials for CNC machining including nylon POM PEEK ABS PTFE and polycarbonate

Nylon (PA6 / PA66)

Strong, tough, wear-resistant, and suitable for gears, bearings, rollers, and structural components.

Wear resistantToughCost-effective

POM / Acetal

Excellent dimensional stability and low friction for precision moving components.

Low frictionStablePrecision

PEEK / PTFE / PC / ABS

Use PEEK for high-performance service, PTFE for chemical resistance and low friction, PC for impact clarity, and ABS for economical prototypes.

High tempChemical resistancePrototype

Metals and alloys for CNC machining

Metals are usually chosen when parts require high load capacity, threaded strength, heat conduction, EMI shielding, or long-term mechanical reliability.

Aluminum 6061 / 7075

Fast to machine, lightweight, and suitable for housings, brackets, fixtures, and aerospace-grade structures.

LightweightFast machining

Stainless steel

Good strength and corrosion resistance for medical, marine, food, and durable industrial components.

Corrosion resistantStrong

Brass, copper, titanium

Choose brass for machinability, copper for conductivity, and titanium for strength-to-weight and biocompatibility.

ConductivePremium

CNC machined metal material samples for aluminum stainless steel brass copper and titanium

Material properties comparison

The values below are typical references for standard grades. Final performance depends on the exact grade, stock form, heat treatment, humidity, machining strategy, and part geometry.

Common CNC metals

材質Why buyers choose itTypical applicationsWatch-outs
鋁 6061Good balance of strength, cost, weight, and machinabilityHousings, brackets, prototypes, fixturesNot as strong as 7075
Aluminum 7075High strength-to-weight ratioAerospace, robotics, performance partsHigher cost; corrosion protection may be needed
Stainless 304 / 316Corrosion resistance and durable appearanceMedical, marine, food, outdoor partsSlower machining than aluminum
Brass C360Excellent machinability and clean finishFittings, bushings, electrical partsHeavier than aluminum
Titanium Grade 5High strength, low weight, corrosion resistanceMedical, aerospace, premium componentsExpensive; requires careful machining

Common CNC plastics

材質Why buyers choose itTypical applicationsWatch-outs
Nylon PA6 / PA66Toughness, wear resistance, good mechanical strengthGears, rollers, bushings, wear padsMoisture absorption can affect dimensions
POM / AcetalLow friction and dimensional stabilityPrecision gears, sliding blocks, fixturesNot ideal for high heat
PEEKHigh temperature, chemical resistance, strengthMedical, aerospace, semiconductor, high-load partsHigh material cost
PTFEVery low friction and chemical resistanceSeals, liners, chemical componentsSoft; difficult to hold very tight tolerances
PC / ABSImpact strength or economical prototypingEnclosures, covers, appearance prototypesGrade selection affects finish and stability
Buyer note: If your drawing has tight tolerances, thin walls, long flat surfaces, or high-temperature service, send the CAD file and use environment early. Material choice and machining strategy should be reviewed together.

How to decide

Use these three filters before locking the material on a CNC drawing.

Start with function

List load, wear, friction, temperature, chemical exposure, electrical needs, and whether the part is cosmetic or functional.

Check machinability

Review tolerance, wall thickness, internal corners, surface finish, post-processing, and whether the material is likely to warp or burr.

Balance cost and volume

For prototypes, choose available stock and fast machining. For production, compare unit cost, inspection risk, service life, and finishing needs.

Industry application examples

Aerospace: Aluminum 7075, titanium, and PEEK for lightweight, reliable components.
Medical: Stainless 316L, titanium, PEEK, and selected medical-grade plastics.
汽車: Aluminum, steel, nylon, and POM for brackets, fixtures, bushings, and moving parts.
Electronics: Aluminum, copper, brass, PC, and ABS for enclosures, heat sinks, connectors, and insulation.
Industrial machinery: Steel, bronze, nylon, and acetal for gears, bearings, rollers, and wear components.
Consumer products: Aluminum, brass, PC, ABS, and acetal for appearance and functional prototypes.

Practical questions before quoting

What is the best material for CNC machined plastic parts?

For many functional plastic parts, nylon and POM are the first materials to compare. Nylon is strong and wear-resistant, while POM is more dimensionally stable and lower friction. PEEK, PTFE, PC, and ABS are selected when the application needs high temperature resistance, chemical resistance, transparency, impact strength, or lower prototype cost.

When should I choose aluminum instead of plastic?

Choose aluminum when the part needs higher stiffness, better heat transfer, stronger threads, metallic appearance, EMI shielding, or more predictable dimensional stability under load. Choose plastic when weight, insulation, corrosion resistance, sliding performance, or noise reduction matters more.

Can tight tolerances be held on CNC plastic parts?

Yes, but the material and geometry matter. POM and PC are generally more stable than moisture-sensitive nylon. Thin walls, large flat areas, and soft materials such as PTFE may need wider tolerances or special machining strategy.

What information helps you recommend the right material?

Send the CAD file or drawing, expected quantity, tolerance requirements, operating temperature, load, friction or wear conditions, chemical exposure, target finish, and whether the part is for prototype testing or production use.

Need help choosing a CNC machining material?

Share your drawing, material preference, working environment, and quantity. We can help compare practical material options for machining cost, tolerance risk, and long-term performance.

We do not sell, trade, or rent your personal data. You can contact us at any time to request, update, or delete your information.

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