DMLS vs. CNC Machining: When to 3D Print Metal Parts?

Introduction: The Metal Manufacturing Crossroads

Hi, I’m Barry Zeng, a manufacturing engineer at Shanghai Yunyan Prototype & Mould Manufacture Factory. More and more clients ask me: “Should I CNC machine my metal part, or use DMLS (Direct Metal Laser Sintering) to 3D Print Metal Parts?” Both technologies produce functional metal components, but they excel in different scenarios. CNC machining is subtractive — cutting away material from a solid block. DMLS is additive — building parts layer by layer from metal powder. In this guide, I’ll compare DMLS and CNC machining across accuracy, surface finish, material options, geometric complexity, lead time, and cost. You’ll learn when to 3D Print Metal Parts (complex geometries, internal channels, lightweight structures) and when CNC is still the better choice (simple shapes, tight tolerances, large volumes). I’ll also share a case study where DMLS saved 80% material and 60% lead time. By the end, you’ll know exactly which technology fits your project.


Chapter 1: How DMLS Works – The Additive Approach

DMLS metal 3D printing
DMLS uses a laser to fuse metal powder layer by layer — ideal for complex geometries when you 3D Print Metal Parts

DMLS (Direct Metal Laser Sintering) is a powder bed fusion process. A high‑power laser selectively melts metal powder (20–60 micron layers) according to CAD geometry. The build plate lowers, a new layer of powder is spread, and the process repeats. After printing, parts are heat‑treated to relieve stress and support structures are removed. DMLS can 3D Print Metal Parts in materials like aluminum (AlSi10Mg), titanium (Ti6Al4V), stainless steel (316L, 17‑4PH), Inconel, and maraging steel. The key advantage: no tooling, no material waste (unmelted powder is recycled), and the ability to create geometries impossible with CNC.


Chapter 2: How CNC Machining Works – The Subtractive Approach

CNC machining starts with a solid block of metal. Rotating cutting tools remove material to create the final shape. CNC is subtractive — the chips are waste (though recyclable). CNC can achieve extremely tight tolerances (±0.005 mm) and excellent surface finishes (Ra 0.4–1.6 µm). It works with virtually any metal: aluminum, steel, stainless, titanium, brass, copper, Inconel, and more. For simple shapes, large parts, or high volumes, CNC is often faster and cheaper than trying to 3D Print Metal Parts.


Chapter 3: Geometric Complexity – Where DMLS Shines

The single biggest reason to 3D Print Metal Parts with DMLS is geometric complexity. CNC machines have limited tool access. Features like internal channels, undercuts, deep cavities, and lattice structures are difficult or impossible to machine.

  • Internal cooling channels: DMLS can produce conformal cooling channels that follow part contours — impossible with CNC. These channels reduce cycle time in injection molds by 20–40%.
  • Lattice structures: Lightweight, high‑stiffness lattices (e.g., gyroid, diamond) can be printed but not machined.
  • Organic / topology‑optimized shapes: Generative design creates organic, bone‑like structures that are impossible to machine.
  • Internal voids and passages: Fluid manifolds with internal channels can be printed as one piece, eliminating assembly.

If your design has any of these features, DMLS is likely the only way to 3D Print Metal Parts that meet your requirements.


Chapter 4: Accuracy and Surface Finish – CNC Leads

CNC machined metal part
CNC machining delivers tighter tolerances and better surface finishes than DMLS when you 3D Print Metal Parts

For applications requiring extreme precision, CNC is still superior.

  • CNC accuracy: ±0.005–0.01 mm. Surface finish Ra 0.4–1.6 µm.
  • DMLS accuracy: ±0.05–0.1 mm. Surface finish Ra 6–12 µm (as‑printed), improvable to Ra 1–2 µm with machining.

DMLS parts have a characteristic “stair‑step” texture and require support structures that leave marks. For mating surfaces, bearing journals, or sealing faces, DMLS parts often require secondary CNC machining. If you need tight tolerances out of the gate, CNC is better. If you can accept ±0.05 mm and post‑processing, DMLS can work.


Chapter 5: Material Waste and Cost

Material cost and waste are dramatically different.

  • CNC: Material utilization 20–60%. The rest becomes chips (recyclable, but at a loss). For expensive metals like titanium ($50–100/kg), waste is costly.
  • DMLS: Material utilization 90–98%. Unmelted powder is sieved and reused. For titanium, DMLS can be cheaper than CNC for complex parts because you’re not buying a large block and machining 80% away.

Example: A titanium bracket with complex topology. CNC requires a 2 kg block to produce a 0.4 kg part (80% waste). DMLS uses 0.45 kg of powder (10% waste). The DMLS material cost is lower despite higher powder price. When you 3D Print Metal Parts, you pay for near‑net shape — not for chips.


Chapter 6: Lead Time – Prototyping vs. Production

For low volumes (1–100 parts), DMLS is often faster. No tooling, no programming for complex fixtures. A DMLS part can be printed in 1–5 days. CNC may take 1–2 weeks for complex parts (programming, fixturing, machining). For high volumes (>500 parts), CNC becomes faster because once the program is proven, you can run parts continuously. DMLS build chambers are limited in size — you can only fit so many parts per build. For production runs, CNC is usually faster and cheaper per part.


Chapter 7: Material Properties – DMLS vs. Wrought

DMLS parts are not identical to wrought (forged or rolled) metal. They are slightly anisotropic (properties vary with build direction) and have internal residual stress. After heat treatment, DMLS titanium (Ti6Al4V) achieves 95–100% of wrought strength. DMLS aluminum (AlSi10Mg) is slightly less ductile than wrought 6061. For most functional applications, DMLS properties are acceptable. But for safety‑critical parts (aerospace structural, medical implants), you must validate with test coupons.


Chapter 8: Decision Matrix – When to Use Each Technology

RequirementDMLS (3D Print Metal Parts)CNC Machining
Complex internal channels✅ Ideal❌ Impossible
Lattice / organic shapes✅ Perfect❌ Impossible
Tight tolerance (±0.01 mm)❌ Requires post‑machining✅ Direct
Low volume (1–10)✅ Fast, no tooling⚠️ High setup cost
High volume (>500)❌ Slow, expensive per part✅ Fast, cheap per part
Large part (>300 mm)❌ Limited build volume✅ Unlimited (with large machines)
Expensive material (titanium)✅ Low waste (90%+ utilization)❌ High waste (40–60% utilization)

Chapter 9: Case Study – Conformal Cooling Mold Insert

An injection molder needed a mold insert with conformal cooling channels to reduce cycle time. CNC machining could only produce straight drilled channels, leaving hot spots. We used DMLS to 3D Print Metal Parts in maraging steel (MS1). The printed insert had cooling channels that followed the part contour perfectly. Cycle time dropped from 45 seconds to 28 seconds — a 38% improvement. The DMLS insert cost $4,500; the CNC insert would have cost $3,000 but with worse cooling. The cycle time savings paid for the DMLS insert in 3 months.


Chapter 10: Hybrid Approach – DMLS + CNC Finishing

The best of both worlds: 3D Print Metal Parts near‑net shape with DMLS, then CNC machine critical surfaces to tight tolerances. This hybrid approach is common for:

  • Mold inserts (DMLS for cooling channels, CNC for parting line and ejector pin holes).
  • Medical implants (DMLS for porous lattice, CNC for mating surfaces).
  • Complex brackets (DMLS for organic shape, CNC for mounting holes and bearing bores).

We offer this hybrid service at our. You get the geometric freedom of DMLS and the precision of CNC.


Conclusion: Choose Based on Complexity and Volume

Deciding between DMLS and CNC comes down to geometry, volume, and tolerance requirements. Use DMLS to 3D Print Metal Parts with internal channels, lattices, or organic shapes — especially for low volumes or expensive materials. Use CNC for simple shapes, tight tolerances, high volumes, or very large parts. We offer both DMLS and CNC, plus hybrid finishing. Send me your CAD file and quantity. I’ll provide a free DFM analysis, technology recommendation, and quote — within 24 hours. Let’s choose the right path for your metal part.


👇 DMLS or CNC? Let’s Find the Right Fit.

Send me your CAD file and volume. I’ll analyze your geometry, tolerance needs, and material — and recommend DMLS, CNC, or a hybrid approach. Free DFM report and quote within 24 hours.

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Call Barry

Direct engineering line
(I answer DMLS vs. CNC questions)

+86 138 1894 4170

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Email Your Specs

Free DFM & technology comparison
(Response within 24h)

info@ymolding.com

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Visit Our Site

Download “DMLS vs. CNC Decision Guide”
(Comparison table, cost analysis)

www.ymolding.com

Not sure which technology fits your part? Just say: “Barry, here’s my part — DMLS or CNC?” I’ll give you an honest recommendation.

🏭 DMLS vs. CNC — Make the Right Metal Manufacturing Choice 🏭

P.S. Mention “metal guide” when you email, and I’ll send you a cost comparison spreadsheet and a DMLS design rule checklist.


Barry Zeng
Senior Manufacturing Engineer, Shanghai Yunyan Prototype & Mould Manufacture Factory
(10+ years in metal manufacturing — DMLS and CNC. Let me help you choose the right technology for your project.)

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