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Choosing Cutting Tools & Inserts for Turning

How to read ISO insert codes, choose coatings and ISO material grades, and pick negative or positive geometry for roughing and finishing.

Choosing Cutting Tools & Inserts for Turning

The insert is where the cut actually happens, and choosing the wrong one wastes material, time, and money faster than almost any other mistake on a CNC lathe. A modern indexable insert combines a carbide substrate, a coating, an edge geometry, and a chipbreaker — and each must match the material, the operation, and the machine. This guide breaks down how to read insert codes, pick coatings and grades, and select geometry for roughing versus finishing, with the kind of practical detail a Saudi job shop turning everything from mild steel to 316 stainless actually needs.

When a part demands the right tooling first time, our precision turning & machining services keep a range of grades on hand for each material family.

Reading the ISO insert code

Indexable inserts use an ISO designation like CNMG 120408. Each position tells you something:

  • C — shape (C = 80° rhombic; common ones: C, D=55°, V=35°, T=triangle, W=trigon, R=round).
  • N — clearance angle (N = 0°, negative; P = 11°, positive).
  • M — tolerance class.
  • G — chipbreaker / hole feature.
  • 12 — cutting edge length (mm).
  • 04 — thickness.
  • 08nose radius (0.8 mm).

The two practical levers most often are shape (strength vs. access) and nose radius (finish and strength vs. detail).

Negative vs. positive inserts

  • Negative inserts (no relief, like CNMG) have a 90° edge, are double-sided (more cutting edges per insert = lower cost per edge), and are strong — ideal for roughing steel and rigid setups.
  • Positive inserts (like CCMT) have built-in relief, a sharper, lower-force edge, single-sided — better for finishing, slender parts, small lathes, aluminium, and stainless where cutting force must stay low.

A common Saudi-workshop habit: rough with a tough negative CNMG, finish with a sharp positive CCMT or a wiper insert.

Coatings and what they're for

Coating Best for Why
Uncoated / polished carbide Aluminium, brass, soft non-ferrous Sharp edge, no built-up edge, low friction
TiN (gold) General light duty Hardness, lower friction, easy wear-spotting
TiCN Steel, abrasive materials Hardness and wear resistance
Al₂O₃ (alumina) High-speed steel turning Heat/oxidation barrier at high Vc
TiAlN / AlTiN Stainless, high heat, dry/MQL Stays hard hot, oxidation-resistant
CVD multilayer Steel roughing, long runs Thick, abrasion-resistant stack
PVD thin coat Sharp-edge finishing, stainless Tough edge, less prone to chipping

As a rule, CVD-coated grades rough steel well; PVD-coated grades keep a sharper, tougher edge for stainless and interrupted cuts.

ISO material groups (the colour code)

Insert makers classify by ISO group, which decides the grade you reach for:

  • P (blue) — steels.
  • M (yellow) — stainless steels.
  • K (red) — cast iron.
  • N (green) — aluminium and non-ferrous.
  • S (brown) — heat-resistant superalloys, titanium.
  • H (grey) — hardened steel.

Match the grade's group to the work. A P-grade flogged in stainless will fail by built-up edge and chipping; an N-grade in steel wears in minutes.

Geometry: roughing vs. finishing

  • Roughing wants a strong shape (C or W), larger nose radius for edge strength, a robust chipbreaker, and a negative insert. Depth of cut should stay larger than the nose radius so the chip curls properly.
  • Finishing wants a sharper positive geometry, small-to-medium nose radius, a fine-feed chipbreaker, and possibly a wiper insert (a flat-ish secondary land that smooths the surface, letting you run faster feed for the same finish).
  • Profiling and tight corners need a smaller-angle shape (D, V) for clearance, accepting a weaker, shorter-lived edge.

Nose radius — the finish trade-off

A larger nose radius gives a stronger edge and better finish at a given feed, but increases radial cutting force (more chatter risk on slender parts) and rounds out sharp internal corners. A smaller radius reaches detail and cuts low-force but wears faster and leaves a coarser finish. 0.4 mm is a good finishing default; 0.8 mm a solid all-rounder; 1.2 mm for heavy roughing.

Practical selection workflow

  1. Identify the material group (P/M/K/N/S/H).
  2. Pick the operation: roughing → strong negative; finishing → sharp positive/wiper.
  3. Choose coating to match (CVD for steel roughing, PVD/uncoated for stainless and aluminium).
  4. Set nose radius to balance finish, force, and detail.
  5. Confirm the holder matches the insert shape and hand (R/L/neutral).
  6. Run the maker's Vc/feed for that exact grade, then tune by chips.

Conclusion

There is no single "best" insert — only the right insert for the material, operation, and machine in front of you. Read the ISO code, match the colour group, choose negative for strength or positive for finish, and let the coating handle heat and wear. For turned parts where tool selection decides the result, see our precision turning & machining services and the Industrial Knowledge Base.

SKYLINE Engineering

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

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