Brushed aluminium surface-finish sample with a linear satin texture

Finishing guide

CNC surface finishes: the complete guide to choosing one

The most common question before a project starts isn't tolerance or price. It's "what will the finish look like, and which one does the part actually need?" Here is the practical answer: every finish we run, with real numbers for appearance, roughness, thickness, corrosion resistance, the effect on your dimensions, and cost, plus what each industry specifies and how to call it out on a drawing.

Every finish starts from the as-machined surface, the texture left behind by the cutting tool. Turned parts come out finer (Ra 0.8–1.6 µm) than milled faces (Ra 1.6–3.2 µm) because the tool stays in continuous contact with the part. This baseline matters because most coatings copy that surface rather than hide it, as we explain below.

Every finish, with the numbers

Typical ranges from production practice, confirmed per part at DFM review. Cost is relative ($ lowest → $$$$ highest).
FinishLook & feelRa / thicknessCorrosionEffect on sizeCost
As-machinedFine tool linesRa 1.6–3.2 µmLowNone$
Bead blastUniform matteRa 1.6–6.3 µmCosmeticSlight$$
BrushedDirectional satinRa 0.4–1.6 µmCosmeticSlight$$
PolishingReflective → mirrorRa 0.1–0.8 µmCosmeticRemoves a little$$$$
Anodize II (Al)Matte–satin, any colour3–5 µmModerate+½ of thickness / face$$
Anodize III hard (Al)Dark, ~400–600 HV8–25 µmHigh+~0.01 mm / face$$$
Chem film / chromate (Al)Clear or gold<3 µmLow–modNegligible$
Passivation (SS)No visible changenoneModerateNone$
Electropolish (SS)Mirror-brightRa 0.1–0.4 µmHighRemoves 5–25 µm$$$$
Black oxide (steel)Matte black<3 µmLow (needs oil)Negligible$
Zinc plate (steel)Clear / yellow / black5–12 µmModerate (sacrificial)+5–12 µm$
Electroless nickelEven satin, any geometry8–25 µmHigh+8–25 µm, uniform$$$
Hard chromeBright, very hard25–250 µmHigh+25–250 µm$$$$
Powder coatDurable colour film50–100 µmHigh+50–100 µm$$

Anodize suits aluminium; passivation & electropolish are for stainless; black oxide & zinc are for steel; electroless nickel, hard chrome and powder coat take to most metals. Bead blast and brushing raise Ra slightly; plating and anodize copy the surface beneath (see below).

Surface treatments such as anodizing, plating, powder coat and passivation run as a batch and carry a minimum lot charge. Coating one part costs nearly as much as coating ten, because the line processes a full lot either way. So that fixed charge spreads thin across a larger order but lands heavily on a single piece.

Not every process scales the same way. Bath finishes like anodizing share a tank, so a larger batch mostly adds chemistry, not labor: whether it's ten parts or a thousand, the labor per part barely moves. Hand finishing is the opposite. Polishing a complex shape full of edges and corners is done by hand, part by part, so a thousand parts is close to a thousand times the work. (A simple bar can be polished on the machine in a single pass; an intricate shape has to be worked by hand.) The rule of thumb: labor-heavy finishes don't get cheaper with volume, but batch finishes do.

See the finishes

Bead-blasted aluminium
Bead blast
Brushed aluminium
Brushed
Electroless nickel plating over a brushed aluminium surface, uniform satin
Nickel plating (brushed)
Polished stainless steel surface
Polished
Colour-anodized aluminium, Type II
Anodize II · colour
Black Type II anodized aluminium
Anodize II · black
Type III hard-anodized aluminium
Anodize III · hard black
The detail buyers most often overlook: plating and anodizing mirror the surface beneath them, a part machined to Ra 1.6 is still Ra 1.6 after nickel, tool marks and all. To remove them, we polish or brush the surface before coating.

Anodize: Type II vs Type III

Anodizing grows a hard oxide layer into the aluminium instead of sitting on top of it, so the finish is tough and won't chip or peel. Type III is several times thicker and far harder:

Coating thickness (relative) Type II 3–5 µm · ~300–400 HV · colour + corrosion Type III 8–25 µm · ~400–600 HV · wear, aerospace, much harder

Two things to plan for. Dimensions: the layer grows about half into the part and half outward, so a hardcoat adds roughly 0.01 mm to each surface, which matters on a tight bore. Alloy: 6061-T6 and 5052 anodize cleanly and take colour evenly; 7075 can show slight colour variation; 2024 comes out mottled; cast alloys go dull and porous. We'll flag this at DFM review and mask or pre-size the part where it counts.

From our floor: for an even cosmetic anodize we bead-blast first, so the colour lands uniform. For Type III on tight fits we machine the bore oversize before anodizing. And anything plated or polished ships packed separately, since those surfaces mark easily in handling.

How to call it out on your drawing

A precise callout removes the back-and-forth and gets you an accurate quote the first time:

FINISH: TYPE II ANODIZE, BLACK, COLOUR DYED + SEALED PER ISO 7599, 0.7 MIL (18 µm) NOM
SURFACE: Ra 0.8 µm MAX ON FACE A  (symbol per ISO 1302 / ASME Y14.36)
MASK: THREADS + BORE B PRIOR TO COATING
DIMENSIONS: MACHINE BORE B TO 12.75 mm BEFORE ANODIZE

Specify a fine Ra only on the faces that need it: a sealing face, a sliding fit, a visible show surface. Leaving the rest as-machined is what keeps the part affordable, and a single mirror-polished face can cost more than all the machining combined.

Five mistakes that cost a respin

  • Writing "anodize" with no type. Type II and III differ in thickness, hardness and colour, so always state II or III.
  • Ignoring hardcoat growth. Type III adds real thickness, so tight bores and bearing fits need pre-sizing or masking.
  • Expecting plating to hide marks. It mirrors the surface beneath, so smooth the part first.
  • Powder coat on the wrong part. It cures at 175–200 °C, so keep it off plastics and heat-sensitive assemblies.
  • Specifying hard (hexavalent) chrome. It's increasingly restricted under REACH/RoHS, so ask us about trivalent chrome or electroless-nickel alternatives.

What each industry typically specifies

Common pairings by sector, a starting point, not a rule.
IndustryTypical materialTypical finish
Aerospace & drones7075 · Ti-6Al-4VType III hard anodize; chem film; as-machined
Medical & lab316 stainless · PEEKPassivation; electropolish; clean as-machined
Robotics & automation6061 · 7075 · 17-4PHClear / black anodize; bead blast; electroless nickel
Consumer6061 · 6063 · titaniumColour anodize; bead blast; brushed
Automotive & EV4140 · 42CrMo · 6061Black oxide; zinc; phosphate; powder coat
IndustrialMild / alloy steel · brassZinc plate; powder coat; hard chrome; as-machined

How to choose

Tell us what the part has to do, whether that is a show face, a sliding fit, corrosion resistance, or conductivity, and we will recommend the right finish at DFM review. If there is a finish you would like to match, send a photo or a sample; we will match the texture and colour as closely as possible and show you a sample first.

Get a quote in 48 hours See the Finish Library

客户最常问的不是公差,也不是价格,而是「这个面做出来是什么效果、应当选用哪一种」。本文详解我们常做的各类表面处理:外观效果、粗糙度参考、对尺寸的影响及选型建议。

先看本色加工,即零件下机时刀具留下的原始纹理。车削面(Ra 0.8–1.6)比铣削面(Ra 1.6–3.2)更细,因为刀具与工件连续接触。需注意:多数表面处理是复制这层基底纹理,而非完全覆盖。

常见表面处理对照表

以下为生产常见范围,每件在 DFM 评审时再逐一确认。成本为相对值($ 最低 → $$$$ 最高)。
表面处理外观手感Ra / 厚度耐蚀适用成本
本色加工细刀纹Ra 1.6–3.2 µm非外观面、最省$
喷砂均匀亚光Ra 1.6–6.3 µm仅外观外观均匀、遮刀纹、阳极前打底$$
拉丝方向性缎面Ra 0.4–1.6 µm仅外观高档可见面$$
抛光反光至镜面Ra 0.1–0.8 µm仅外观密封面、外观$$$$
阳极氧化 II 型亚光缎面、可上色3–5 µm铝件上色 + 耐蚀$$
硬质阳极 III 型深色、极硬8–25 µm耐磨、滑动、航空$$$
钝化外观无变化不增厚不锈钢耐蚀$
电镀(镍 / 化学镀镍 / 锌 / 铬)亚光至亮面视工艺中至高耐蚀、导电、外观$$
粉末喷涂耐用彩色涂层50–100 µm钢 / 铝件上色 + 防护$$

阳极氧化、电镀、粉末喷涂、钝化等表面处理均按批次作业,设有最低批量费用。加工 1 件与 10 件的成本相近——产线需整批运行。这与工装逻辑一致:批量越大,单件分摊成本越低;小批量则单件成本较高。

但并非所有工艺均遵循此摊薄规律。阳极氧化等槽液处理共用槽液——批量增加时,主要增加的是药剂成本而非人工,因此无论 10 件还是 1,000 件,单件人工成本几乎不变。手工抛光则截然相反:带棱角的复杂零件需人工逐件打磨,1,000 件的工时接近 1 件的 1,000 倍。(简单棒料可在机床上一次走刀完成抛光,复杂形状则只能依靠手工缓慢作业。)因此,人工密集型处理不会因量大而显著降低单价,只有批量型工艺才会。

看实拍

喷砂铝件
喷砂
拉丝铝件
拉丝
拉丝铝件表面化学镀镍,均匀缎面
镀镍(拉丝)
抛光不锈钢件
抛光
彩色阳极氧化铝件,II 型
阳极 II · 上色
黑色阳极氧化铝件,II 型
黑色阳极 II
III 型硬质阳极氧化铝件
黑色硬质阳极 III
买家最容易忽略的一点:电镀和阳极氧化会复制底层表面 —— Ra 1.6 的零件镀后仍为 Ra 1.6,刀纹依旧可见。若需去除,应在涂覆先行抛光或拉丝。
车间经验:要做均匀的彩色阳极,需先喷砂打底,上色才能均匀;镜面件与电镀件在运输中易刮花,单独包装更为稳妥。

图纸上怎么标

标注清晰可省去反复沟通,确保一次获得准确报价:

FINISH: TYPE II ANODIZE, BLACK, COLOUR DYED + SEALED PER ISO 7599, 0.7 MIL (18 µm) NOM
SURFACE: Ra 0.8 µm MAX ON FACE A  (粗糙度符号按 ISO 1302 / ASME Y14.36)
MASK: THREADS + BORE B PRIOR TO COATING(镀前遮蔽螺纹与 B 孔)
DIMENSIONS: MACHINE BORE B TO 12.75 mm BEFORE ANODIZE(阳极前按 12.75 mm 预加工 B 孔)

仅在必要表面标注严格 Ra 值——如密封面、滑动配合面或外观面。其余表面保持本色加工状态,以控制零件成本;镜面抛光成本甚至可能超过机械加工本身。

五个会导致返工的错标

  • 只写「阳极」未注明类型—— II 型与 III 型在膜厚、硬度及颜色上均存在差异,务必明确标注。
  • 忽略硬质阳极氧化的增厚效应—— III 型阳极氧化会产生实际膜厚增长,紧配合孔位及轴承位需预留尺寸余量或进行遮蔽保护。
  • 指望电镀层覆盖刀痕—— 镀层会复刻基底纹理,建议先将基材表面加工光洁。
  • 粉末喷涂适用对象错误—— 固化温度高达 175–200 °C,不适用于塑料件及耐热性差的组件。
  • 指定六价铬镀层—— 受 REACH/RoHS 法规限制日益严格;建议咨询三价铬或化学镀镍替代方案。

各行业常见搭配

各行业常见的「材料 + 表面」搭配,仅供参考,不是硬性规定。
行业常用材料常见表面处理
航空与无人机7075 · Ti-6Al-4VIII 型硬质阳极;铬酸盐膜;本色
医疗与实验室316 不锈钢 · PEEK钝化;电解抛光;洁净本色
机器人与自动化6061 · 7075 · 17-4PH本色/黑色阳极;喷砂;化学镀镍
消费产品6061 · 6063 · 钛合金彩色阳极;喷砂;拉丝
汽车与新能源4140 · 42CrMo · 6061发黑;镀锌;磷化;粉末喷涂
工业设备碳钢/合金钢 · 黄铜镀锌;粉末喷涂;硬铬;本色

怎么选

请告知零件的使用要求(外观面、滑动配合、耐蚀、导电),报价时我们将一并给出选型建议。如有中意的效果,欢迎提供照片或样品,我们将尽力匹配纹理与颜色,但不保证完全一致,并先为您打样确认。

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Bar-fed CNC turning at Fenva Precision

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