RPM for 2" Aluminum — Cutting Speed

When machining Aluminum with a 2-inch diameter tool, the recommended spindle speed range is 1146–1910 RPM, calculated from a surface speed of 600–1000 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

MaterialAluminum
Tool Diameter2"
Recommended SFM Range600–1000 SFM
Recommended RPM Range1146–1910 RPM

Why These Parameters Matter

Running below the minimum SFM causes built-up edge (BUE) and poor surface finish on Aluminum; exceeding the maximum accelerates tool wear and risks thermal damage to the workpiece and coating. Staying within the 600–1000 SFM range for a 2-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 — 2" Diameter

MaterialRPM (min)RPM (max)
Aluminum (current)11461910
Mild Steel286477
Hardened Steel134229
Stainless Steel191344
Titanium153306
Cast Iron382764
Brass573955
Plastic7641528

Machining Tips for This Combination

Aluminum cuts best with 2-flute carbide endmills running 0.005–0.012 inch per tooth — soft alloys like 6061 prefer the upper end, hardened 7075 the lower. Skip flood coolant for milling and use a steady air blast instead; trapped chips and lubricant film weld to flutes and ruin the surface finish within a few passes. A 3-flute 'aluminum-specific' endmill with polished flutes and zero-degree helix transition is the right finishing choice. Watch for built-up edge if SFM drops below 400 — clear it by raising RPM, not by adding coolant.

Large-diameter tools (above 1 inch) turn the limiting factor from surface speed into spindle torque and rigidity. Step down axial depth before chasing higher feed rates, because the tool can easily demand more horsepower than the spindle delivers. Indexable insert tooling becomes economically attractive at this size — replacing a single damaged insert is far cheaper than re-grinding a 1.5 inch solid endmill. Run lower RPM with higher chip load per flute (0.005–0.010 inch per tooth on standard steel) to keep cutting forces inside the machine's capability.

Machining Tips

Use sharp, coated carbide tooling rated for Aluminum. 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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