Boring Bars — Catalog and Selection Guide

Compiled 2026-04-04 · 40 chunks, 12 posts · boring-bars · solid-carbide · indexable-tools · precision-boring · tool-selection

Summary

[[Boring]] bars are precision tools designed to enlarge existing holes with exceptional accuracy and surface finish. Available in solid carbide and indexable configurations, boring bars range from micro sizes (0.030" diameter) to heavy-duty applications (1"+ diameter). Selection depends on hole diameter, depth, material, and required tolerance. Solid carbide bars offer superior rigidity for precision work, while indexable bars provide cost-effective tooling for larger diameters and production environments.

Types and Specifications

Solid Carbide Boring Bars

Micro Boring Bars (0.030" - 0.125")

  • Harvey 23330 series: 0.030" - 0.125" diameter
  • 4-flute helical design for chip evacuation
  • Available coatings: Uncoated, AlTiN (C3), TiB2 (C8)
  • L/D ratios: 3:1 to 5:1 maximum recommended
  • Shank sizes: 1/8" standard
Part Number Diameter Length of Cut Overall Length Shank Coating
2331M-C3 0.0394" 0.1562" 1.5" 0.125" AlTiN
23347-C3 0.0469" 0.1875" 1.5" 0.125" AlTiN
23362-C8 0.0625" 0.25" 1.5" 0.125" TiB2
23378-C3 0.0781" 0.3125" 1.5" 0.125" AlTiN
23393-C6 0.0937" 0.375" 1.5" 0.125" AlTiN

Standard Boring Bars (0.125" - 0.375")

  • Harvey 2340M and 7316 series
  • Increased rigidity with larger shanks (3/16", 1/4", 3/8")
  • 70% stronger than round neck equivalents
  • Square neck design for maximum rigidity
Part Number Diameter Length of Cut Overall Length Shank Coating
2343M-C6 0.1181" 0.375" 1.5" 0.125" AlTiN
23409-C3 0.1406" 0.5625" 2.0" 0.1875" AlTiN
731610-C3 0.1562" 0.625" 2.0" 0.1875" AlTiN
2345M-C8 0.1968" 0.75" 2.5" 0.25" TiB2
2346M-C6 0.2362" 0.875" 2.5" 0.25" AlTiN
23416-C8 0.25" 0.875" 2.5" 0.25" TiB2

Coating Selection Guide

Uncoated (Base Models)

  • Best for [[aluminum-6061]] and soft materials
  • Allows for resharpening
  • Lower cost option
  • SFM: 200-800 depending on material

AlTiN Coating (C3/C6 suffix)

  • General purpose coating for [[4140-steel]] and [[304-stainless]]
  • Temperature resistance to 1800°F
  • Reduces built-up edge formation
  • 2-3x tool life over uncoated

TiB2 Coating (C8 suffix)

  • Premium coating for [[titanium-ti6al4v]] and [[inconel-718]]
  • Extreme hardness and wear resistance
  • Low friction coefficient
  • Best for interrupted cuts and high-temp alloys

Speeds and Feeds by Material

Steel Applications

[[4140-steel]] (28-32 HRC)

  • SFM: 200-350 (coated), 150-250 (uncoated)
  • Feed: 0.001-0.003" per tooth for finishing
  • Depth of cut: 0.005-0.020" finishing passes
  • Coolant: Flood recommended

[[1018-1045-steel]]

  • SFM: 300-500 (coated), 200-350 (uncoated)
  • Feed: 0.002-0.005" per tooth
  • Can push higher feeds with TiB2 coating

Stainless Steel

[[304-stainless]]

  • SFM: 180-280 (avoid work hardening speeds)
  • Feed: 0.0015-0.004" per tooth
  • Maintain constant feed to prevent [[work-hardening]]
  • AlTiN coating essential for tool life

Aluminum

[[aluminum-6061]]

  • SFM: 800-1500 (uncoated preferred)
  • Feed: 0.003-0.008" per tooth
  • Sharp cutting edges critical
  • Flood coolant or air blast for chip clearing

Difficult Materials

[[titanium-ti6al4v]]

  • SFM: 120-200 (TiB2 coating required)
  • Feed: 0.001-0.003" per tooth
  • Light depths of cut: 0.005-0.015"
  • Constant feed engagement essential

[[inconel-718]]

  • SFM: 80-150 (TiB2 coating mandatory)
  • Feed: 0.0008-0.002" per tooth
  • Ceramic inserts for production work
  • Maintain sharp tools - dull tools work-harden material

Selection Criteria

L/D Ratio Guidelines

Micro Applications (under 0.125")

  • Maximum L/D: 6:1 for finishing
  • Reduce speed 10% for each additional L/D beyond 4:1
  • Consider [[chatter-vibration]] dampening techniques

Standard Applications (0.125" - 0.375")

  • Maximum L/D: 5:1 for production work
  • 3:1 ideal for best surface finish
  • Use shortest possible overhang

Hole Diameter vs Bar Size

Clearance Requirements

  • Minimum 0.050" clearance for chip evacuation
  • 0.020" minimum for finishing operations
  • Deeper holes need proportionally more clearance

Rigidity Calculations

  • Deflection = (Force × Length³) / (3 × E × I)
  • Use largest possible bar diameter
  • Square shanks increase rigidity 40% over round

Common Problems and Solutions

Chatter Issues

Symptom: Poor surface finish, dimensional variation Causes: Excessive L/D ratio, wrong speeds, insufficient rigidity Solutions:

  • Reduce overhang to minimum
  • Decrease SFM by 20-30%
  • Use heavier bar diameter
  • Add [[chatter-vibration]] damping compound
  • Increase feed rate to load tool

Forum Experience: "Had chatter at 0.675" bore but not 0.864" with same 1/2" bar. Smaller diameter gives less support to bar. Dropped to 240 SFM and increased feed to 0.0015"/rev - problem solved."

Poor Surface Finish

Built-up Edge on Aluminum

  • Use uncoated tools with sharp edges
  • Increase SFM to 1000+ if rigidity allows
  • Polish tool cutting edge
  • Ensure adequate chip clearing

Work Hardening in Stainless

  • Maintain constant feed engagement
  • Use positive rake geometry
  • Don't dwell at bottom of holes
  • AlTiN coating reduces tendency

Tool Breakage

Micro Boring Bars

  • Check for proper speeds (often run too fast)
  • Ensure gradual engagement
  • Use climb boring when possible
  • Maximum depth per pass: 2x bar diameter

Shop Floor Tips

Setup and Workholding

Machinist Experience: "Always indicate your bar in the holder - even 0.001" runout shows up in surface finish. Use shortest possible overhang, even if it means multiple setups."

Coolant Strategy:

  • Through-coolant bars show 30-50% improvement in tool life
  • Air blast minimum for aluminum to prevent chip packing
  • Mist systems adequate for steel finishing operations

Programming Considerations

Feed Rate Management:

  • Start cuts with 50% programmed feed for first 0.010"
  • Maintain constant chip load - don't vary feed rates
  • Back-boring (climb) often gives better finish than conventional

Depth Control:

  • Program 0.0005" spring passes for critical dimensions
  • Allow for tool deflection in tight tolerance work
  • Multiple finish passes better than single heavy cut

Tool Life Optimization

Coating Performance:

  • TiB2 shows 3-5x life in titanium vs AlTiN
  • Uncoated carbide can be resharpened 4-6 times economically
  • AlTiN coating fails suddenly - monitor for edge chipping

Maintenance:

  • Stone cutting edges between jobs to maintain sharpness
  • Check runout after each tool change
  • Replace at first sign of edge wear - don't push to failure
  • [[boring]] — Basic boring operation fundamentals and techniques
  • [[insert-selection-guide]] — Indexable boring bar insert selection
  • [[cnmg-inserts]] — Common indexable inserts for larger boring bars
  • [[chatter-vibration]] — Diagnosing and solving boring bar chatter issues
  • [[tool-wear-diagnosis]] — Identifying when boring bars need replacement
  • [[surface-finish-problems]] — Troubleshooting boring surface finish issues
  • [[cnc-lathe-setup]] — Setup procedures for boring operations on CNC lathes
  • [[turning-basics]] — Fundamental lathe operations including boring