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Pressure Knurling VS CNC/Cut Knurling: Key Differences in Mechanical Texturing
In mechanical manufacturing, knurling is a critical surface texturing process that creates raised or recessed patterns (e.g., diamond, straight, crosswise) on component surfaces to enhance grip, aid assembly, or improve aesthetics. Two primary knurling techniques—Pressure Knurling (Chipless Knurling) and Cut Knurling (Chip Knurling)—are widely used, each with distinct working principles, advantages, and application scenarios. Below is a detailed comparison to help select the optimal process for specific manufacturing needs.
Core Working Principle
Pressure Knurling
Pressure knurling is a chipless forming process that relies on mechanical pressure to shape the material. A knurling tool (equipped with hardened steel rollers featuring the desired pattern) is pressed against the rotating workpiece. The pressure exceeds the material’s yield strength, causing plastic deformation of the surface metal to form the corresponding texture. No material is removed during the process—instead, the metal is displaced to create raised ridges and recessed grooves.
Cut/CNC Knurling
Cut knurling is a machining process with chip formation. The knurling tool features sharp cutting edges (rather than smooth rollers) that shear off excess material from the workpiece surface as it rotates. The cutting edges follow the desired pattern, removing metal chips to create precise, clean-textured surfaces. Unlike pressure knurling, this method involves material removal rather than deformation.
Material Compatibility
Pressure Knurling
Ideal for ductile, low-to-medium hardness materials that can withstand plastic deformation without cracking. Common applications include:
- Ferrous metals: Mild steel, low-carbon alloy steel
- Non-ferrous metals: Aluminum, copper, brass, zinc alloy
- Notes: Not suitable for brittle materials (e.g., high-carbon steel, cast iron) or materials with hardness exceeding 30 HRC, as they may crack under pressure.
Cut Knurling
Designed for harder, less ductile materials where plastic deformation is impractical. Typical substrates include:
- Ferrous metals: High-carbon steel, alloy steel, stainless steel (after pre-activation)
- Non-ferrous metals: Hardened copper alloys, titanium alloys
- Notes: Can also be used for ductile materials when precise texture dimensions or minimal deformation are required.
Application Scenarios
Pressure Knurling
Preferred for high-volume production, cost-sensitive projects, and components prioritizing durability and grip over ultra-precision:
- Hand-operated components: Control knobs, tool handles, thumb screws, grip panels
- Fasteners: Knurled bolts, nuts, threaded inserts (improves tightening torque)
- Automotive/interior parts: Gear shift knobs, door lock handles, dashboard controls
- Advantages: High efficiency, low tooling cost, and excellent wear resistance of textured surfaces.
Cut Knurling
Selected for precision components, hard-material parts, and applications requiring tight tolerances:
- Precision mechanical parts: Shaft collars, gear hubs, bearing retainers
- Aerospace/medical components: Surgical instrument handles, aircraft control levers
- High-hardness hardware: Stainless steel fasteners, hardened tooling components
- Advantages: Dimensional accuracy, clean texture edges, and no risk of material deformation affecting component fit.
If you’re looking for a factory specializing in knurling and machining of metal parts, you can learn more about us here.