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Investigating the Causes of Deformation in CNC-Machined Plastic Parts and Effective Solutions

2025-10-13

一、Four Primary Causes of Post-CNC Deformation in Plastic Parts

Compared to metals, plastics exhibit more sensitive physical properties and reactions during machining, making them more prone to deformation. Technical experts identify the following four key factors:

Plastic Thermal Expansion Coefficient Far Exceeds Metal

Plastic typically exhibits a thermal expansion coefficient 3–8 times higher than metal. During CNC Milling, friction between the tool and material generates significant heat, causing localized temperatures to rapidly rise to 60–80°C. If heat cannot dissipate promptly, it leads to irregular plastic expansion. Uneven cooling and contraction after machining then cause warping or bending deformation.

Insufficient Release of Internal Plastic Stress

During injection molding, uneven cooling of plastic blanks can leave residual “internal stress” within molecular chains. Without proper pre-treatment before machining, CNC milling removes surface material, causing rapid stress release and resulting in “springback deformation” of parts. This effect is particularly pronounced in materials like nylon (PA) and polycarbonate (PC).

Improper Clamping Method and Force

Clamping force is applied to secure parts during machining. Excessive force may cause plastic deformation, while insufficient force allows parts to shift due to vibration during processing. This not only compromises accuracy but also exacerbates deformation through uneven stress distribution.

Mismatched Machining Parameters and Material Properties

Some manufacturers apply metal machining parameters to plastics, such as using high cutting speeds and low feed rates for soft materials like polyethylene (PE), leading to heat accumulation. Alternatively, improper toolpath design (e.g., single-sided continuous cutting) subjects parts to excessive localized stress, ultimately causing deformation.

二、Five Measures to Prevent and Reduce Plastic Part Deformation

Addressing these causes, our expert team has distilled five proven solutions based on practical industrial experience:

Pre-treat plastic blanks before machining

For highly hygroscopic plastics like PA and PBT, dry them in an 80–120°C oven for 2–4 hours to remove internal moisture (heat-induced vaporization accelerates deformation). For blanks with internal stress, employ “constant-temperature stress relief treatment” (e.g., static holding at 50°C for 12 hours) to pre-release 60%–70% of internal stress.

Adopt Flexible Clamping Solutions

Replace traditional rigid fixtures with vacuum cups (for large flat parts) or elastic jaws (for irregularly shaped parts) to distribute clamping force by increasing contact area. Some manufacturers also insert silicone pads between fixtures and parts to further cushion pressure.

Customize machining parameters for plastics

Adjust parameters based on plastic hardness:

- For soft plastics (e.g., PE, PP), use “high feed rate + low cutting speed” (feed rate 1200–1800 mm/min, cutting speed 600–800 m/min) to minimize frictional heat. For rigid plastics (e.g., PC, POM), cutting speed can be moderately increased, but diamond-coated tools are recommended to reduce friction coefficients. Employ layered cutting (0.1–0.3 mm per layer) to avoid excessive single-pass removal.

Enhanced Cutting Heat Control

Configure a dedicated cooling system and use dry compressed air during machining (to prevent plastic moisture absorption from liquid cooling). Direct cooling to the cutting zone in real-time, maintaining part temperature fluctuations within ±3°C. For heat-prone thin-walled parts, employ “intermittent cutting” to allow cooling intervals.

Implement dimensional stabilization post-processing

Place finished parts in a constant-temperature environment of 25–30°C for 4–8 hours to allow dimensions to stabilize naturally. For parts requiring extreme precision (e.g., tolerances of ±0.01 mm), perform “low-temperature aging treatment” (24 hours at 10–15°C) to further reduce subsequent deformation risks.

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