SKD11 Tool Steel CNC Machining Material Handbook
SKD11 Tool Steel CNC Machining Material Handbook
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Material Quick Reference Card
┌──────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Material Name: SKD11 Tool Steel
│ Category: High-carbon high-chromium cold-work tool steel
│ Density: 7.70 g/cm³
│ Tensile Strength: High compressive strength
│ Yield Strength: High after hardening
│ Hardness: 58–62 HRC hardened
│ Melting Point: 1420–1450 ℃
│ Machinability: ★★☆☆☆ Difficult
│ Corrosion Resistance: ★★★☆☆ Moderate
│ Cost: ★★★★☆ High
│ Keywords: cold work die steel, D2 equivalent, wear resistance
└──────────────────────────────────────────────┘
1. Material Overview
1.1 Basic Introduction
SKD11 is a cold-work tool steel similar to AISI D2. It is used for dies, punches, wear plates, cutting tools, and mold components requiring high wear resistance.
In CNC machining, SKD11 Tool Steel should be evaluated by strength, stiffness, corrosion resistance, machinability, tolerance stability, surface treatment compatibility, cost, and production volume.
1.2 Source, Production, and Raw Stock Forms
Produced by tool-steel melting, refining, forging or rolling, spheroidizing annealing, and final hardening after rough machining.
Common CNC raw material forms include round bar, square bar, plate, sheet, tube, extrusion, forging, casting, and custom blank. The best form depends on part geometry, required tolerance, mechanical properties, and order quantity.
2. Composition and Physical Properties
2.1 Chemical Composition and Grade System
| Element or Range | Typical Content | Function |
|---|---|---|
| Fe | balance | Controls material performance |
| C | 1.4–1.6% | Controls material performance |
| Cr | 11–13% | Controls material performance |
| Mo | 0.8–1.2% | Controls material performance |
| V | 0.2–0.5% | Controls material performance |
2.2 Physical Properties
| Property | Typical Value | CNC Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Density | 7.70 g/cm³ | Affects part weight and handling |
| Melting point/range | 1420–1450 ℃ | Important for welding, heat treatment, and thermal safety |
| Thermal conductivity | Grade dependent | Affects cutting heat and heat dissipation |
| Electrical conductivity | Grade dependent | Important for electrical applications |
| Thermal expansion | Grade dependent | Affects precision and dimensional stability |
| Elastic modulus | Grade dependent | Affects rigidity and deflection |
3. Mechanical and Chemical Performance
3.1 Mechanical Properties
| Property | Typical Value |
|---|---|
| Tensile strength | High compressive strength |
| Yield strength | High after hardening |
| Hardness | 58–62 HRC hardened |
| Elongation | Depends on grade, temper, and stock form |
| Fatigue strength | Application dependent and should be verified for critical parts |
Mechanical values vary with standard, heat treatment, product form, section thickness, and supplier certificate. For safety-critical parts, use certified material data instead of generic values.
3.2 Corrosion Resistance
Corrosion performance depends on alloy chemistry, environment, surface roughness, heat treatment, and protective finish. For outdoor, marine, chemical, medical, or high-humidity applications, confirm the required material grade and finishing process before machining.
3.3 Special Properties
Important special properties may include heat-treatment response, magnetic behavior, conductivity, weldability, high-temperature resistance, low-temperature toughness, biocompatibility, or environmental compliance. These should be reviewed according to the exact grade and application.
4. CNC Machining Process
4.1 Machinability Evaluation
Machinability rating: ★★☆☆☆ Difficult.
The machining strategy should consider material hardness, ductility, thermal conductivity, work-hardening tendency, chip shape, and tool wear behavior.
4.2 Recommended Tooling
Use rigid workholding, sharp tools, stable tool overhang, and suitable carbide tooling. For non-ferrous metals, polished flutes and high rake angles often improve chip evacuation. For steels, stainless steels, titanium, and nickel alloys, coating choice and coolant delivery are critical for tool life.
4.3 Reference Cutting Parameters
| Operation | Spindle Speed (RPM) | Feed Rate (mm/min) | Depth of Cut (mm) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rough machining | Material and tool dependent | Material and tool dependent | Conservative first, then optimize |
| Finish machining | Higher but stable | Lower and consistent | 0.03–0.30 typical |
These values are starting references only. Final parameters should be adjusted according to tool diameter, machine rigidity, coolant, clamping, tolerance, and surface finish requirements.
4.4 Cooling and Lubrication
Use coolant strategy according to material behavior. Flood coolant is common for steels, stainless steels, titanium, and nickel alloys. Air blast or mist can be useful for aluminum and brass. Magnesium requires strict fire-safety controls for chips and dust.
4.5 Machining Challenges and Solutions
| Challenge | Recommended Solution |
|---|---|
| Tool wear | Use suitable coating, correct speed, stable coolant, and rigid setup |
| Burrs or long chips | Optimize rake angle, chip load, chip breaker, and finishing pass |
| Heat and distortion | Use staged machining, balanced stock removal, and stress-relieved material |
| Surface scratches | Control chip evacuation and handling |
4.6 Chip Control
Stable chip evacuation protects surface finish, improves tool life, and reduces dimensional variation. Chip form should be controlled by tool geometry, feed per tooth, depth of cut, coolant direction, and toolpath strategy.
5. Post-Processing and Finishing
5.1 Surface Treatment Options
Grinding, polishing, nitriding, PVD coating.
Typical CNC surface roughness can range from Ra 3.2 μm for general machining to Ra 0.8 μm or better with finishing passes, polishing, grinding, or lapping where applicable.
5.2 Heat Treatment
Rough machine in annealed condition, then harden and temper. Finish grinding or EDM is often used after hardening.
6. Applications and Material Selection
6.1 Typical Applications
| Industry or Area | Typical Parts |
|---|---|
| Tooling | punches and dies |
| Molds | wear inserts |
| Cutting | blades and shear parts |
6.2 Advantages and Limitations
| Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|
| Excellent wear resistance | Difficult machining |
| High hardness | Brittle compared with low-alloy steels |
| Good dimensional stability | High heat-treatment cost |
6.3 Cost and Selection Advice
Relative material cost: ★★★★☆ High.
Choose SKD11 Tool Steel when its strength, corrosion resistance, machining behavior, surface finish, and cost match the part requirements. Compare it with nearby grades before final selection, especially when the design involves tight tolerance, harsh environment, heat treatment, welding, or high-volume production.