Machining Calculator Hub
Carbide Parameters

Carbide End Mill Cutting Parameters

This chart summarizes carbide end mill cutting parameters: cutting speed, chip load, spindle speed, feed rate, and setup adjustments for common materials.

Carbide end mill cutting parameters table

MaterialGroupSFM1/8"3/16"1/4"3/8"1/2"5/8"3/4"1"
Aluminum 440/356/380/C61300Cast aluminum / aluminum bronze family500-10000.0010.0020.0020.0030.0040.0050.0060.007
Aluminum 2024/6061/7075Wrought aluminum alloys800-15000.0010.0020.0020.0030.0040.0050.0060.007
Yellow / high-lead / red brassCopper alloys800-15000.0010.0010.0020.00250.0030.0040.0040.005
Gray cast ironDuctile / gray cast iron100-4000.00050.0010.0020.0030.0040.0050.0060.008
Low alloy steel 10XX/11XX/13XXCarbon / low alloy steel100-3000.00050.0010.00150.0020.0030.0040.0050.006
Austenitic stainless 304/316Stainless steel100-2500.00010.00020.00050.0010.00150.0020.0030.004
Titanium 6Al-4V and CP TiTitanium alloys50-2500.00050.00050.00050.0010.0010.00150.0020.004
Inconel / Hastelloy nickel-baseNickel alloys40-600.00050.00050.0010.0010.0020.00250.0030.004

End mill RPM and feed calculator

Parameter checklist

FAQ

Are these chart values final production recommendations?

No. They are starting values for planning. Use the specific cutting tool manufacturer data, workholding condition, coolant method, and machine limits before running production parts.

Why do different speed and feed charts disagree?

Charts assume different tool materials, coatings, tool life targets, rigidity, coolant, radial engagement, and material hardness. A generic chart should be adjusted to the actual tool and setup.

What is the most important carbide end mill parameter?

SFM and chip load must be chosen together. High RPM with too little chip load can rub and overheat; high chip load with weak fixturing can chatter or break the tool.

Do these parameters work for every carbide end mill?

No. Variable helix, roughers, high-feed tools, coatings, corner radii, and manufacturer geometry can require different data. Use the toolmaker chart when available.

Data sources and limits

These charts are starting values only. Actual speeds and feeds depend on tool geometry, coating, holder rigidity, coolant, chip evacuation, radial width of cut, axial depth of cut, material hardness, and machine power.

  • Sandvik Coromant: milling definitions for cutting speed, spindle speed, feed per tooth, feed per minute, MRR, cutting force, and power.
  • Kennametal: RPM, IPM, chip-load, and SFM formulas.
  • Harvey Tool: general carbide end mill SFM and chip-load tables.
  • Norseman Drill & Tool: HSS drill speed and feed rules of thumb.
  • LittleMachineShop: turning, milling, drilling, and reaming cutting speed tables.