When it comes to CNC machining, feeds and speeds are everything. Even the most advanced CNC machine or expensive cutting tool can fail if your spindle speed and feed rate aren’t right. Correct settings improve tool life, surface finish, and machining efficiency—while wrong settings can cause chatter, tool breakage, and wasted time.
In this guide, we’ll break down feeds and speeds, show you how to calculate them step-by-step, and give you practical tips to dial in the perfect cutting parameters for any job.
Understanding the Basics
Before jumping into calculations, let’s define the key terms you’ll encounter:
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Cutting Speed (SFM or SMM): How fast the cutting edge moves across the material’s surface.
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Spindle Speed (RPM): How many revolutions per minute the tool spins.
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Chip Load (Feed per Tooth): The amount of material removed by each tooth on every revolution.
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Feed Rate (IPM or mm/min): How fast the tool moves through the material.
These terms work together—change one, and you’ll need to adjust the others.
Essential Formulas
Here are the two main formulas you’ll use:
RPM = ( Cutting Speed x 3.82 ) / Tool Diameter
Step-by-Step: Calculating Feeds and Speeds
1. Choose the Cutting Speed
Look up recommended cutting speeds from the tool manufacturer or a reference chart. For example:
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Aluminum: 250–400 SFM
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Mild steel: 80–120 SFM
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Stainless steel: 60–100 SFM
2. Calculate RPM
Use the cutting speed and tool diameter.
Example: For a 0.5″ end mill cutting mild steel at 100 SFM:
RPM = ( 100 x 3.82 ) / 0.5 = 764 RPM
3. Determine Feed Rate
Pick a chip load based on tool diameter and material. Then calculate:
Example: With 2 flutes and a chip load of 0.001″:
Feed Rate = 764 x 0.001 x 2 = 1.53 IPM
Example in Practice
Let’s say you’re machining aluminum with a 0.25″ 2-flute end mill:
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Cutting speed: 300 SFM
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Chip load: 0.002″
Factors That Influence Feeds and Speeds
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Material hardness (steel vs. aluminum vs. plastic)
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Tool diameter & flute count
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Tool coating (TiN, TiAlN, etc.)
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Machine rigidity (spindle, workholding, fixturing)
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Coolant usage
No two setups are identical—so treat calculator values as starting points.
Troubleshooting Guide
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Burn marks or discoloration → Spindle too fast, feed too slow.
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Chatter or vibration → Reduce feed or improve rigidity.
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Poor surface finish → Tool dull, or wrong feed/speed balance.
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Tool breakage → Feed too aggressive or depth of cut too high.
Pro Tips for Success
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Use software calculators like FSWizard or G-Wizard for quick estimates.
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Always run a test cut before committing to a full job.
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Keep a logbook of successful feeds and speeds for future reference.
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Increase speeds gradually until you find the sweet spot.
Conclusion
Mastering feeds and speeds isn’t complicated—it’s about understanding the formulas, starting with recommended values, and then adjusting for your specific setup. By applying the steps in this guide, you’ll extend tool life, achieve smoother finishes, and cut more efficiently.
Next time you set up a job, calculate your starting parameters, make a test cut, and fine-tune—your tools and parts will thank you!

