RPM for 0.125" Titanium — Cutting Speed

When machining Titanium with a 0.125-inch diameter tool, the recommended spindle speed range is 2445–4889 RPM, calculated from a surface speed of 80–160 SFM for carbide tooling. Selecting the correct RPM ensures optimal tool life and surface finish quality. Use this reference alongside your feeds and speeds calculator to set up new operations with confidence.

Recommended Cutting Parameters

MaterialTitanium
Tool Diameter0.125"
Recommended SFM Range80–160 SFM
Recommended RPM Range2445–4889 RPM

Why These Parameters Matter

Running below the minimum SFM causes built-up edge (BUE) and poor surface finish on Titanium; exceeding the maximum accelerates tool wear and risks thermal damage to the workpiece and coating. Staying within the 80–160 SFM range for a 0.125-inch tool balances productivity with tool life. These values assume sharp carbide tooling in good condition. Dull tools, poor fixturing, or interrupted cuts may require reducing speed by 20–30% from the recommended range. Depth of cut and radial engagement also influence optimal SFM — lighter finishing passes can tolerate the upper end of the range while full-width roughing passes benefit from the lower end.

Compare Materials — 0.125" Diameter

MaterialRPM (min)RPM (max)
Aluminum1833530558
Mild Steel45847639
Hardened Steel21393667
Stainless Steel30565500
Titanium (current)24454889
Cast Iron611212223
Brass916715279
Plastic1222324446

Machining Tips for This Combination

Titanium (Grade 2 commercial, Grade 5 Ti-6Al-4V) is unforgiving — climb-milling is mandatory, flood coolant is non-negotiable, and SFM stays in the 50–100 range. Use sharp uncoated carbide (coatings can react chemically with titanium at the cutting interface) and peck drill deep holes to evacuate hot chips. Titanium chips ignite below visible-spark size and burn at temperatures water will not extinguish — keep a Class D fire extinguisher within arm's reach and clear chip accumulation between every operation.

Small-diameter tools (under 0.5 inch) live or die by runout. Even 0.002 inch of total indicated runout in a end-mill holder doubles the load on whichever flute happens to engage first and halves tool life. Switch from an ER collet chuck to a shrink-fit or hydraulic holder for production work. Chip load drops to 0.001–0.002 inch per tooth at these sizes, so feed rates are modest and the spindle is asked to turn fast. For hole-making, helical interpolation is gentler than straight plunging — plunging concentrates load on the center of the flute where chip clearance is minimal.

Machining Tips

Use sharp, coated carbide tooling rated for Titanium. Apply appropriate coolant: flood coolant for steel and stainless, air blast or MQL for aluminum to prevent chip re-cutting. Verify spindle runout (< 0.0002") before production runs. Reduce feed per tooth by 20–30% for the first pass when breaking surface scale on hot-rolled stock. Always consult your tooling manufacturer's recommended parameters as a primary reference and use these values as a cross-check. Monitor chip color and size during the first cut — blue chips or dust-like chips indicate the speed or feed needs adjustment.

Related Variants

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