Machining Inconel 718

Compiled 2026-04-04 · 40 chunks, 15 posts · superalloys · heat-resistant · aerospace · work-hardening · ceramic-tooling

Summary

Inconel 718 is a precipitation-hardened nickel-chromium superalloy notorious for being one of the most difficult materials to machine. It retains strength at extreme temperatures, work hardens rapidly under cutting forces, and generates excessive heat that destroys cutting tools. Used extensively in aerospace turbine components, this material demands specialized tooling, aggressive coolant application, and parameters that often contradict conventional machining wisdom. Success requires understanding that Inconel punishes hesitation—you either cut aggressively enough to stay ahead of [[work-hardening]] or destroy your tools fighting through hardened surface layers.

Speeds and Feeds

Carbide End Mills (Standard Roughing)

  • Surface Speed: 50-70 SFM (manufacturers), 70-90 SFM (experienced shop floor)
  • Chip Load: 0.002-0.004" per tooth
  • Depth of Cut: 0.02-0.05" radial, 0.15-0.30" axial maximum
  • Example: 1/2" end mill = 458 RPM at 60 SFM, 0.003" chip load = 11 IPM

Real machinist experience shows 70 SFM is often minimum to avoid [[work-hardening]]. One forum user reported: "I run 70 SFM (534 RPM) with 0.003" chip load (13 IPM) on 1/2" 8-flute, getting 45-60 minutes tool life with 4% stepover."

Ceramic End Mills (High-Speed Roughing)

  • Surface Speed: 1200-1500 SFM
  • Feed Rate: 200-400 IPM depending on axial depth
  • Depth of Cut: 0.010-0.030" radial (light but fast)
  • RPM Formula: (SFM × 12) ÷ (π × diameter)

Shop floor reality: Ceramic tools run 20x faster than carbide but require extremely light cuts and cannot finish—they generate too much heat causing burrs. Used for roughing only.

Drilling

  • Surface Speed: 20-40 SFM
  • Feed Rate: 0.002-0.005" per revolution
  • Peck depth: 0.5-1.0× diameter
  • Coolant: High-pressure flood essential

[[Tapping]]

  • Surface Speed: 15-25 SFM
  • Cutting fluid: Sulfur-chlorine EP oil
  • Peck tapping: Mandatory for blind holes
  • Thread pitch: Coarse threads preferred

End Mills

Carbide with Coatings (Primary Choice):

  • Harvey Tool nickel alloy series with specialized coatings
  • TiAlN coating for general use
  • TiB2 coating for extended tool life
  • Unequal spacing geometry to reduce [[chatter-vibration]]
  • Sharp cutting edges (not chipbreaker geometry)

Ceramic (High-Speed Roughing Only):

  • Silicon nitride based ceramics
  • Whisker-reinforced ceramics for interrupted cuts
  • Never use for finishing operations

Inserts for Turning/Boring

  • Grade: Uncoated carbide or TiAlN coated
  • Geometry: Positive rake angles, sharp edges
  • Chip breaker: Light or no chip breaker
  • Corner radius: 0.005-0.015" maximum

Drill Selection

  • Parabolic flute geometry for chip evacuation
  • 130-140° point angle
  • TiAlN or TiCN coating
  • Carbide preferred over HSS above 1/4" diameter

Common Problems

Rapid Tool Wear

Symptoms: Tools dulling within 15-30 minutes, excessive flank wear Causes:

  • Running too slow (below 50 SFM allows work hardening)
  • Insufficient feed rate causing tool rubbing
  • Inadequate coolant flow

Solutions:

  • Increase surface speed to 70+ SFM minimum
  • Maintain constant chip load—never let tool rub
  • Use high-pressure coolant (300+ PSI if available)

Work Hardening

Symptoms: Tools suddenly grabbing, increased cutting forces, poor surface finish Reality: Once Inconel work hardens, you're fighting 40-50 HRC instead of 30-35 HRC Prevention:

  • Never climb mill without rigid setup
  • Keep tools sharp—dull tools guarantee work hardening
  • Take full-width cuts when possible to avoid re-cutting hardened areas

Built-Up Edge (BUE)

Symptoms: Gummy chips welding to cutting edge, poor surface finish Cause: Inconel's tendency to stick to cutting tools at moderate temperatures Solutions:

  • Run faster (ceramic speeds) or slower (heavy carbide cuts)—avoid moderate speeds
  • Flood coolant with EP additives
  • Use coated tools to reduce adhesion

[[Tool-wear-diagnosis]]

  • Flank wear: Normal wear pattern, expect 0.015" maximum
  • Crater wear: Indicates excessive heat, reduce speed or increase coolant
  • Chipping: Tool too aggressive for setup rigidity

Shop Floor Tips

The Two-Speed Strategy

Experienced machinists use two distinct approaches:

  1. Conservative carbide: 50-70 SFM with heavy feeds and flood coolant
  2. Aggressive ceramic: 1200+ SFM with light cuts for roughing only

Avoid the middle ground (200-400 SFM)—this generates maximum heat with poor chip evacuation.

Coolant Strategy

  • Concentration: 8-12% soluble oil (higher than normal)
  • Pressure: 300+ PSI through-spindle if available
  • Flow rate: Maximum available—Inconel generates 3x more heat than [[4140-steel]]
  • Alternative: Mist cooling with ceramic tools can work better than flood

Programming Considerations

  • Conventional milling preferred unless machine is extremely rigid
  • Constant engagement: Use trochoidal/adaptive toolpaths
  • No dwelling: Program direct feed moves, no G04 dwell commands
  • Climb finish passes: Only with flood coolant and rigid setup

Workholding Reality

Forum consensus: "Your workholding is never rigid enough for Inconel." Double-check:

  • Vise jaw contact—file clean, use soft jaws
  • Part support—minimize overhang below 3:1 ratio
  • Workpiece preparation—stress relieve if possible

Tool Life Expectations

Real-world tool life (compared to [[aluminum-6061]]):

  • Roughing end mills: 45-60 minutes (vs. 8+ hours in aluminum)
  • Finishing end mills: 15-30 minutes
  • Drills: 10-50 holes depending on diameter
  • Taps: 5-20 holes maximum

One shop reported: "2.5 end mills per part roughing, 1.5-2 finishing tools per part" on typical aerospace components.

Heat Treatment Considerations

  • Annealed Inconel: Easier to machine, 85-95 HRB
  • Solution treated: Moderate difficulty, 30-35 HRC
  • Age hardened: Most difficult, 35-45 HRC
  • Always verify material condition—heat treatment dramatically affects machinability
  • [[work-hardening]] — Understanding and preventing hardening during cuts
  • [[ceramic-tooling]] — High-speed ceramic end mill applications
  • [[chip-control]] — Managing Inconel's gummy chip formation
  • [[tool-wear-diagnosis]] — Identifying wear patterns specific to superalloys
  • [[face-milling]] — Large surface machining techniques for Inconel plates
  • [[drilling]] — Specialized techniques for Inconel hole making
  • [[tapping]] — Thread cutting strategies for heat-resistant alloys
  • [[titanium-ti6al4v]] — Comparison with other difficult aerospace materials