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Slide 002: Troubleshooting Common CNC Routing Problems

Slide Visual

Troubleshooting Common CNC Routing Problems

Slide Overview

This slide provides a systematic troubleshooting framework for diagnosing and resolving the most common CNC routing problems. Students will learn to identify problems by their symptoms and apply targeted solutions.

Instruction Notes

Systematic Troubleshooting Approach

When a cut does not meet expectations, diagnose systematically: 1. Identify the symptom — what does the problem look and sound like? 2. Classify the cause — is it a parameter issue, tool issue, setup issue, or machine issue? 3. Apply the targeted fix — change ONE variable at a time and re-test

Problem-Solution Reference

Problem: Burn Marks on Cut Edges - Symptom: Dark discoloration on cut surfaces, smoke smell - Causes: Feed rate too slow (most common), dull tool, RPM too high, climb milling on material with resin - Fixes: Increase feed rate by 25-50%; replace dull tool; reduce RPM; switch to conventional milling for resinous woods - Quick test: If increasing feed override to 150% eliminates burning, your programmed feed is too low

Problem: Chatter (Vibration Marks) - Symptom: Evenly spaced ridges/marks on cut surface, audible vibration during cutting - Causes: Resonance from tool stick-out, loose workholding, worn spindle bearings, excessive depth of cut - Fixes: Shorten tool stick-out; improve workholding; change RPM by ±10-15% to shift away from resonant frequency; reduce stepdown by 50% - Note: Chatter frequency depends on the natural frequency of the weakest component in the system

Problem: Fuzzy/Torn Edges - Symptom: Fibers pulled up on top surface (upcut bit) or pushed down on bottom surface (downcut bit) - Causes: Wrong bit geometry for the application; dull tool; cutting against the grain - Fixes: Use downcut for clean top surface; compression bit for clean both surfaces; increase RPM slightly; apply masking tape over cut line before cutting

Problem: Dimensional Inaccuracy - Symptom: Parts are consistently oversized or undersized - Causes: Tool deflection, incorrect tool diameter in CAM, backlash, miscalibrated steps/mm - Diagnostic: If outside profiles are oversized AND inside profiles are undersized by the same amount → tool deflection. If all dimensions are off by the same percentage → calibration error. - Fixes: For deflection — reduce depth of cut, reduce feed, shorten stick-out, add finishing pass. For calibration — adjust steps/mm in controller settings.

Problem: Tool Breakage - Symptom: Tool snaps during cutting - Causes: Excessive chip load, hitting a clamp/screw, plunging too fast, material harder than expected, tool fatigue (accumulated micro-fractures) - Prevention: Calculate chip load before every job; verify toolpath clears all fixtures; use ramping entry; replace tools on a schedule; inspect tools before use

Problem: Material Lifting/Shifting - Symptom: Part moves during cutting, dimensions suddenly wrong, tool may break - Causes: Insufficient workholding force, cutting forces exceed hold, vibration loosened clamps - Fixes: Add more hold-downs; reduce cutting forces (slower feed, shallower passes); add tabs for through-cuts; verify clamp tightness

Key Talking Points

  1. Most problems have multiple possible causes — diagnose before changing things randomly
  2. Change ONE variable at a time to isolate the cause
  3. Feed rate and tool condition account for 70% of all quality issues
  4. Chatter is the hardest problem to solve — it often requires experimentation with RPM
  5. Keep a troubleshooting log — patterns across multiple jobs reveal machine-level issues

Learning Objectives (Concept Check)

  • [ ] Diagnose 5 common CNC routing problems from their symptoms
  • [ ] Apply the systematic troubleshooting approach (symptom → cause → fix)
  • [ ] Distinguish between parameter, tool, setup, and machine-level causes

Last Updated: 2026-03-19