Home Services Industrial Knowledge Base Industrial Knowledge Base Types of CNC Lathe Operations Explained INDUSTRIAL

Types of CNC Lathe Operations Explained

A practical guide to the main CNC lathe operations — turning, facing, threading, drilling, boring, grooving, knurling and parting — and what each produces.

Types of CNC Lathe Operations

A CNC lathe is far more versatile than "making things round." By combining different tools and tool paths, a single setup can produce a wide range of features on one part. Below are the core turning operations every workshop relies on, what each one does, and when it is used. Mastering these is the foundation of precision turning work across GCC industries — from oil & gas fittings to fabrication and machinery spares.

Quick Reference: Operations at a Glance

Operation What it does Typical result
Turning Reduces outside diameter Cylindrical surfaces, steps
Facing Cuts the end flat Clean, square end face
Drilling Cuts a hole on centre Axial hole
Boring Enlarges/finishes a hole Accurate internal diameter
Threading Cuts helical threads External/internal threads
Grooving Cuts a narrow recess O-ring grooves, reliefs
Knurling Forms a textured pattern Grip surface
Parting Cuts the part off the bar Separated finished part

Turning (OD Turning)

Turning is the defining operation — the tool moves parallel to the spindle axis to reduce the outside diameter of the rotating workpiece. It creates cylindrical surfaces and steps (different diameters along the length). Variants include:

  • Rough turning — fast removal of bulk material.
  • Finish turning — light cuts for final size and surface finish.
  • Taper turning — angled cuts to form cones.
  • Profile/contour turning — following a curved path for shaped parts.

Facing

Facing moves the tool across the end of the part (along the X axis) to produce a flat, square end face. It is usually the first operation, setting a clean reference surface and the correct overall length.

Drilling and Boring

  • Drilling is done with a drill held in the tailstock or turret, cutting a hole along the centreline of the part.
  • Boring uses a single-point tool to enlarge and finish an existing hole to an accurate internal diameter and a good finish. Boring is how tight internal tolerances and smooth bores are achieved.

Threading

Threading cuts helical threads, either on the outside (a bolt or stud) or inside (a nut or tapped hole). On a CNC lathe the controller synchronises spindle rotation with tool feed so each pass follows the same helix, building the thread in multiple light passes. CNC threading is fast, repeatable and ideal for the standardised threads used in pipe fittings and fasteners.

Grooving and Parting

  • Grooving cuts a narrow recess into the part — for O-ring seats, snap-ring grooves, or relief cuts. The groove width is set by the tool and the path.
  • Parting (cut-off) uses a thin blade tool to cut the finished part off the bar stock once machining is complete. In bar-fed production this is the final step before the next part begins.

Knurling

Knurling is a forming (not cutting) operation that presses a textured pattern — straight, diagonal or diamond — into the surface to create a grip. It is common on knobs, handles, and tools that need to be turned by hand.

Combining Operations in One Cycle

The real power of CNC turning is chaining these operations automatically. A single program can face, rough turn, finish turn, groove, thread, drill and part off, with the controller indexing the turret between each tool. On turn-mill machines with live tooling and a C axis, you can add cross-drilling, milling flats and slots — finishing a complex part in one setup, which improves accuracy and saves handling time.

For a refresher on the machine itself, see our component and overview guides in the Industrial Knowledge Base. When you need any of these operations performed on real parts, our precision turning & machining services cover the full range.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between drilling and boring?

Drilling creates a hole from solid material; boring enlarges and finishes an existing hole to a precise diameter and finish. They are often used together.

Can a CNC lathe cut both internal and external threads?

Yes. With the correct threading tool and program, a CNC lathe cuts external threads (studs, bolts) and internal threads (nuts, tapped bores).

What does parting off mean?

Parting (cut-off) is the operation that separates the finished part from the bar stock using a thin parting tool, completing the cycle.


Have a part that needs several of these operations? Send us the drawing and we will program a single efficient cycle to produce it accurately and repeatably.

SKYLINE Engineering

@skyline

The engineering team at SKYLINE Industrial Solutions. We publish field-tested guides drawn from real KSA and GCC deployments.

See author profile
SKYLINE engineering services

Need this implemented for you?

Reading is free — building it right takes a team. SKYLINE engineers ship Industrial Knowledge Base for Aramco vendors, banks, hospitals and government agencies across Saudi Arabia. Talk to us before you start.

Aramco Approved Contractor ISO 9001 · ISO 27001 SAMA CSF aligned NCA ECC ready 247+ KSA clients

Comments

0 total · 0 threads
Be the first to leave a comment.