No. 6555 Songze Avenue, Chonggu Town, Qingpu District, Shanghai, China
Common CNC Machine Mistakes: The Pits We’ve Fallen Into, So You Don’t Have To
Opening: A Veteran Machinist’s Honest Words
Let me tell you something from the bottom of my heart: in the CNC machining business, nobody is born knowing it all. The mistakes we’ve made might outnumber all the parts you’ve ever seen.
I’m Barry Zeng, a senior machinist at ymolding. After 10+ years in precision machining, my biggest realization is this: no matter how smart the machine is, it all comes down to how smart the person operating it is. And sometimes, people… well, they can do some particularly… creative stupid things.
This article isn’t one of those technical documents that reads like an instruction manual. I want to talk to you about my colleagues—like my buddy Dave—and the “brilliant” mistakes they’ve made. Think of it as listening to stories while learning how to avoid the same pitfalls.
Trap 1: Tool Selection? Close Enough is Good Enough
Person involved: Dave
Dave is a great guy in every way, except when it comes to choosing tools—then he gets lazy.
Last year, we had a rush job with a client breathing down our necks. Dave dug out a severely worn end mill from the “might still work” old tool box, cranked up the RPM, and hit the start button.
For the first three minutes, the machine sang beautifully. Then, suddenly, there was a sound that Dave described as “a garbage disposal swallowing a wrench.” tool selection leads to severe wear and machining quality issues
Trap 2: Workholding? I’ll Deal with That Later
Person involved: Sarah
Sarah is the youngest CNC operator in our shop. Newbies always have to pay some tuition.
Once we got an aerospace part with tolerances tighter than my old man’s wallet. Sarah thought “workholding” meant just throwing a couple of parallels under it and clamping it down “close enough,” right?
Midway through machining, the workpiece moved. Less than a millimeter, really. But in precision manufacturing, a millimeter might as well be a mile.
That part ended up becoming a $2,000 paperweight that vaguely resembled an aircraft component. roper workholding is fundamental to precision machining
Trap 3: Coolant? That’s Just an IQ Tax
Person involved: Tom
Tom is the “tough guy” in our shop. He thinks using coolant is for wimps, firmly believing that “real machinists cut dry!”
Every time before starting a job, he’d declare with great bravado: “Real machinists cut dry!”
Then, his carbide end mill would turn into a glowing meteor, and his workpiece surface would develop a unique texture resembling what an angry cat might leave behind.
He says the parts he machines now are so shiny they reflect his newly sprouting gray hairs.
Trap 4: The Program? Don’t Worry, I Wrote It with My Eyes Closed
Person involved: Barry Zeng (Yes, that’s me)
This story is a bit embarrassing, but for your sake, I’ll spill it.
Early in my career, I wrote a program for mold machining. Pretty complex, with surfaces and all. After writing it, I did two things: first, didn’t simulate it; second, didn’t check it. Then I hit the start button, confident as a fool who doesn’t know he’s about to cause trouble.
Then the machine slammed into the vise at full speed.
That sound… how to describe it? Like someone threw a bucket of wrenches into an industrial washing machine. The curses our shop foreman yelled that day—I still haven’t found all of them in the dictionary.
Trap 5: Inspection? We’ll Get to That Later
Person involved: Jeff
Jeff has a famous saying: “You know what’s most boring? Measuring dimensions. Ship it, trust the process.”
The day after he said that, a client received 50 parts—all wrong, and wrong in exactly the same way. Tolerance requirement was ±0.001 inches; we produced ±0.01 inches.
The client’s expression at that moment still sends chills down my spine.
Jeff’s new catchphrase: “Measure twice, cut once, never cry.”
Trap 6: Machine Maintenance? We’ll Deal with It When It Breaks
Person involved: Everyone
This story doesn’t have a specific name because we were all guilty.
A spindle had been making noise for three months, and every one of us said: “It’s fine, probably just some bearing play, minor issue.” Then it finally failed—catastrophically. Metal shards scattered everywhere. The repair bill had a number that could make a forty-year-old man cry on the spot. Three weeks of downtime, right during our busiest period.
Trap 7: Material? It’s All the Same
Person involved: Everyone again
Steel from the same batch number can be completely different between lots. Heat treatment conditions fluctuate, hardness varies, even alloy composition has subtle differences.
How did we discover this? Because one batch of “identical” stainless steel chewed up all our inserts. Same program, same parameters, but the inserts burned up like they were free.
Your Next Part? Leave It to Us
I’ve said all this not to show off how great we are. Quite the opposite—I want you to know that the reason we’re reliable is because we’ve made enough mistakes.
Every worn-out tool, every crashed program, every scrapped batch of parts has become experience points for today’s ymolding shop.
Dave is picky about tool selection, Sarah double-checks workholding, Tom cares more about coolant than his girlfriend, Jeff measures dimensions until his hands ache, and all of us maintain our machines more diligently than our own cars.
We’re not perfect, but we have experience. And in this industry, experience is the line between a part passing and failing.
So, I’d like to invite you to do one thing:
Next time you have a custom machining job—whether it’s a sketch, an idea, or a complete drawing—send it to us.
Let us use the experience gained from 15 years of stumbling into pits to help you make your parts right.
Email, phone, website—all contact information is on our homepage. Just ask anyone: “Is Barry around?” and they’ll drag me out.
Or you could just say: “I heard you have a Dave who’s quite the talker when it comes to inserts?”
We’ll be waiting.
Core Keywords Covered in This Article:
CNC machining, precision machining, custom part machining, cutting tools, carbide inserts, CNC operator, 3-axis machining, precision manufacturing, workholding fixtures, 5-axis machining, CNC turning, carbide end mills, metalworking fluid, aluminum machining, hardened steel machining, G-code, mold machining, CAM software, cutting parameters, quality control, CMM (Coordinate Measuring Machine), CNC machines, machining equipment, machining parameters, CNC inserts, custom mechanical machining



