Slide 003: Feeds, Speeds & Chip Load Calculations¶
Slide Visual¶

Slide Overview¶
This slide teaches students how to calculate and select appropriate feed rates and spindle speeds for different materials and tools. Understanding chip load is the foundation of productive, safe CNC routing that produces quality results and preserves tool life.
Instruction Notes¶
The Chip Load Formula¶
Chip load is the thickness of material each cutting edge removes per revolution:
Chip Load = Feed Rate Γ· (RPM Γ Number of Flutes)
Or rearranged to find feed rate:
Feed Rate (IPM) = Chip Load Γ RPM Γ Number of Flutes
Why Chip Load Matters¶
Every cutting tool has an optimal chip load range. Cutting outside this range causes problems:
| Condition | Chip Load | Symptoms | Consequences |
|---|---|---|---|
| Too Low (rubbing) | Below recommended | Burning, heat buildup, fine dust instead of chips | Tool dulls quickly, burn marks on material, fire risk |
| Optimal | Within range | Clean chips, smooth cut, no burning | Good finish, long tool life, efficient cutting |
| Too High (overloaded) | Above recommended | Rough cut, tool deflection, chattering | Tool breakage, poor finish, machine strain |
Recommended Chip Loads by Material¶
| Material | ΒΌ" 2-Flute (in/tooth) | β " 2-Flute (in/tooth) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Softwood (pine, cedar) | 0.003β0.005 | 0.002β0.004 | Aggressive OK |
| Hardwood (oak, maple) | 0.003β0.005 | 0.002β0.003 | Reduce for figured grain |
| Plywood/MDF | 0.003β0.005 | 0.002β0.004 | MDF is abrasive β dulls tools faster |
| Acrylic (cast) | 0.003β0.006 | 0.002β0.004 | Use single-flute or O-flute |
| HDPE/Delrin | 0.004β0.007 | 0.003β0.005 | Plastics need aggressive chip load |
| Aluminum (6061) | 0.001β0.003 | 0.001β0.002 | Use single-flute, add lubrication |
| Foam (rigid) | 0.010β0.020 | 0.005β0.010 | Very aggressive, high feed rates |
Example Calculation¶
Cutting ΒΎ" plywood with a ΒΌ" 2-flute upcut end mill at 18,000 RPM: - Target chip load: 0.004" per tooth - Feed Rate = 0.004 Γ 18,000 Γ 2 = 144 IPM - Stepdown: 50% of tool diameter = 0.125" - Number of passes for ΒΎ" material: 6 passes at 0.125" each
Adjusting Speeds and Feeds¶
Start conservative and adjust based on results: - Burning/heat: Increase feed rate (first choice) or decrease RPM - Chattering/rough cut: Decrease stepdown, check tool runout, reduce feed rate - Tool deflection: Reduce stepdown and stepover, use shorter tool or larger diameter - Fuzzy edges (wood): Use downcut bit for top surface, increase RPM slightly
Surface Speed (SFM) Reference¶
SFM = (Ο Γ Tool Diameter Γ RPM) Γ· 12
For a ΒΌ" bit at 18,000 RPM: SFM = (3.14159 Γ 0.25 Γ 18,000) Γ· 12 = 1,178 SFM
Key Talking Points¶
- Chip load is THE critical parameter β it determines cut quality and tool life
- Too slow is just as bad as too fast β rubbing burns the material and dulls the tool
- Always calculate before cutting β do not guess at feed rates
- Start with manufacturer's recommended chip load, then adjust based on results
- Different materials require different chip loads even with the same tool
Learning Objectives (Concept Check)¶
- [ ] Calculate feed rate from chip load, RPM, and flute count
- [ ] Identify symptoms of chip load that is too low vs. too high
- [ ] Select appropriate chip load values for 3 different materials
Last Updated: 2026-03-19