Accupro Cutting Tools — Complete Product Guide
Summary
Accupro is the house brand of MSC Industrial Direct, headquartered in Melville, New York. MSC is the largest industrial distributor in the US, and Accupro is the tooling line they put on the shelf when they want margin and their customers want a budget that isn't embarrassing. The tools are manufactured by third-party partners — MSC doesn't run carbide grinding operations — then branded and sold exclusively through MSC's catalog and website.
The honest description: Accupro sits in the same performance tier as YG-1's value line, Ferra, or Kodiak Cutting Tools. It is not Kennametal KC or Sandvik GC-series. It is also not garbage. Machinist surveys and job-shop forums consistently put Accupro in the "works fine for the money" category, which is exactly the right framing. If a premium brand is $45 for a half-inch four-flute and Accupro is $18, and your job is 6061 aluminum or 1018 steel in moderate volumes, Accupro is a reasonable call. If you're cutting Inconel or holding ±0.0002" all day, it's not your tool.
The main reason to run Accupro is logistics. MSC ships fast — next-day to most of the continental US — and Accupro tools are almost always in stock. If you break a half-inch end mill at 4 PM on a Tuesday and you have a delivery on Thursday, "in stock at MSC" matters more than brand prestige.
What Accupro is best for
- General-purpose milling in steel and aluminum — 1018, 4140 (annealed), 6061-T6, 7075-T6. Standard cuts, standard tolerances.
- Drilling and tapping in job-shop materials — Accupro's carbide drill and tap lines cover the bread-and-butter sizes that job shops burn through.
- Prototyping and one-off work — spending $80 on a Harvey end mill for a one-part run that might iterate six times is hard to justify. Accupro is the sensible call.
- Tool crib filler — shops that run premium tools on their critical features often use Accupro for chamfering, deburring, and secondary operations where tool life is less critical.
- Carbide burrs — Accupro's burr selection is wide and competitively priced. The quality is consistent enough for production deburring.
Where Accupro is not the right call: high-temp alloys (titanium, Inconel, 17-4 PH hardened), hardened tool steels above 50 HRC, and any job where tool life per edge is the dominant cost driver. In those situations, the price delta between Accupro and a premium brand disappears quickly in tool changes.
Brand architecture
Accupro doesn't have a multi-tier sub-brand structure the way Kennametal or Sandvik does. It's a single label with product categories. The distinctions are by tool type and coating.
End mills
The largest Accupro category. They make two-, three-, and four-flute square-end, ball-end, and corner-radius end mills in solid carbide. Also roughing (corncob) end mills for aggressive material removal in aluminum and steel. Standard lengths and stub lengths are stocked; long-reach lengths are hit-or-miss on availability.
Carbide drills
Jobber-length and screw-machine-length solid carbide drills, coolant-through available in some sizes. Not a replacement for a CoroDrill 860 on a production drilling operation, but serviceable for short-run and prototype work.
Taps
HSS and HSS-E taps covering most common thread forms: UNC, UNF, metric. Spiral-flute and spiral-point. Accupro taps are a reasonable job-shop tap — not as consistent as OSG or Balax for production tapping, but appropriate for low-to-moderate volume.
Thread mills
Solid-carbide single-profile and multi-form thread mills. Good option for shops that want to consolidate thread tooling SKUs and run one thread mill on the CNC instead of maintaining a tap collection.
Carbide burrs
Double-cut and single-cut in standard shapes (cylinder, ball, tree, cone, flame). Accupro's burr line is consistently stocked and works for both die-grinder and CNC spindle deburring applications.
Coating cheat sheet
Accupro tools are sold with a few coating options. The specific coating is listed in the MSC product description — check before ordering.
| Coating | What MSC calls it | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Uncoated | Bright / uncoated | Aluminum, copper, soft plastics |
| TiN | TiN | General-purpose steel, low-alloy |
| TiAlN | TiAlN or AlTiN | Alloy steel, stainless, dry cutting |
| AlTiN | AlTiN | Higher-heat applications, 4140, mild stainless |
For aluminum, uncoated or ZrN (if available in the SKU) runs cleaner than TiAlN. For anything with heat — alloy steel, stainless — pick TiAlN.
Typical starting speeds and feeds
Accupro doesn't publish an application guide the way Sandvik or Kennametal does. Use these as rough starting points and dial from there.
| Tool / material | Surface speed | Feed per tooth |
|---|---|---|
| 4-flute end mill, 6061-T6 aluminum | 800–1200 SFM | 0.002–0.005" |
| 4-flute end mill, 1018 steel | 250–400 SFM | 0.001–0.003" |
| 4-flute end mill, 4140 annealed | 200–300 SFM | 0.001–0.002" |
| Carbide drill, 1018 steel | 250–350 SFM | 0.003–0.006 IPR |
| Carbide drill, 6061-T6 | 500–800 SFM | 0.004–0.008 IPR |
Back off 15–20% on interrupted cuts or when using a less-rigid setup. Accupro tools are not built to the same substrate specification as premium brands, so the safety margin at the edge of the envelope is thinner.
When to use Accupro vs. alternatives
- vs. Harvey Tool / Helical Solutions: Harvey and Helical are in a different performance tier — better geometry, tighter tolerances, more specialty options. Use them where the job demands it. Use Accupro where it doesn't.
- vs. YG-1: Direct competitors in the same tier. YG-1 has wider US distribution and slightly more documented grades. Either works; pick based on what your distributor stocks.
- vs. OSG: OSG leads in threading tools (taps, thread mills). Accupro's tap quality is adequate for low-volume work but OSG is worth the premium on production tapping.
- vs. Kodiak Cutting Tools: Kodiak is a similar house-brand/value concept. Accupro wins on logistics if MSC is your primary distributor.
- vs. Kennametal / Sandvik (solid-carbide round tools): Price difference is real — often 2x–3x. For production work in difficult materials, that premium pays back in tool life. For general job-shop work, it often doesn't.
Related articles
- End mill selection guide — flute count, helix angle, coating
- Carbide drill selection — solid vs. indexable vs. modular
- Tapping guide — tap selection, speeds, and feeds
- Machining 6061 aluminum
- Machining 4140 steel
- Tool crib management — when to run premium vs. value-tier tooling
Ask 4man
4man knows the Accupro line available through MSC and can cross-reference it against your material, machine, and job requirements. If Accupro is the right call for your application, it'll say so. If you need a premium grade for the job, it'll tell you that too.