Contents
Introduction
Some of the most critical parts in aerospace, medical devices, and mold making are made from materials that laugh at conventional cutting tools. Hardened steel? Titanium? Tungsten carbide? A standard end mill will dull in seconds. That is where electrical discharge machining (EDM) steps in. EDM does not cut with force. It cuts with sparks. It removes material using controlled electrical sparks that melt and vaporize tiny bits of metal. No mechanical contact. No cutting pressure. No tool wear in the traditional sense.
But here is the thing most people get wrong. EDM is not a replacement for CNC machining. It is a specialized tool for specific, high-value problems. If you are wondering whether your next project truly needs EDM—or if you are overlooking a simpler, cheaper alternative—this article will clear that up. We will walk through exactly what EDM does, when you absolutely need it, how it compares to other methods, and how to keep costs under control. By the end, you will know if EDM is the right call for your parts.
What Is EDM and How Does It Work?
Spark Erosion, Not Cutting
Electrical discharge machining works on a simple but powerful idea. A tiny spark jumps between an electrode and your workpiece. That spark reaches temperatures over 10,000°C in a fraction of a second. It melts a microscopic spot of metal. Then the spark stops. The molten metal cools and gets flushed away by dielectric fluid. This cycle repeats thousands of times per second. The result? Material is removed without any physical tool ever touching the part.
This is why EDM is also called spark erosion. There is no cutting force. No vibration. No mechanical stress on the workpiece. That is what makes it so special for delicate and hard materials.
Key EDM Components
Every EDM machine has four core parts:
| Component | What It Does |
|---|---|
| Electrode or Wire | Conducts the spark to the workpiece |
| Dielectric Fluid | Flushes away debris and cools the cut |
| Power Supply | Generates the controlled electrical pulses |
| Servo Control | Keeps the gap between electrode and part consistent |
The dielectric fluid is usually deionized water or special oil. It is not just a coolant. It also insulates the gap between sparks. Without it, the machine would short-circuit and stop working.
Three Main EDM Types
Not all EDM is the same. There are three primary types, and each solves a different problem:
| EDM Type | Best For |
|---|---|
| Wire EDM | Thin walls, tight corners, 2D profiles, through-cuts |
| Sinker EDM (Ram EDM) | 3D cavities, blind holes, mold cores, textured surfaces |
| Small Hole EDM Drilling | Tiny holes (0.1mm–3mm) in hardened steel, like fuel injector nozzles |
Knowing which type fits your part is the first step to saving time and money.
Materials and Geometries That Need EDM
Hard-to-Cut Materials EDM Handles
Conventional machining struggles with certain materials. EDM does not care about hardness. Here is a real breakdown:
| Material | Hardness (HRC) | Can CNC Mill It? | EDM Needed? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tool Steel (H13, D2) | 50–65 HRC | Only if annealed | Yes, when hardened |
| Titanium Alloy (Ti-6Al-4V) | 35–40 HRC | Difficult, tool wear is high | Often yes |
| Tungsten Carbide | 85–90 HRC | Almost impossible | Yes, always |
| Inconel 718 | 35–45 HRC | Very slow, heavy tool wear | Yes, for precision |
| Stainless Steel 316 | 25–30 HRC | Doable but work-hardens | Sometimes |
Real-world example: A medical device company needed to machine cobalt-chrome hip implant components. The material was 45 HRC. Their CNC mill burned through 12 end mills in one week. They switched to sinker EDM. The parts came out perfect in two days. Zero tool wear on the electrode. The project saved over $8,000 in tooling costs alone.
Complex Shapes EDM Excels At
Beyond hardness, EDM shines when geometry gets tricky. Consider these features:
- Internal sharp corners (under 90°) that no end mill can reach
- Deep narrow slots (aspect ratios over 10:1)
- Fine details like text, logos, or micro-features on molds
- 3D contoured cavities for injection mold cores
If your part has any of these, EDM is likely your best option. Milling and grinding hit physical limits here. Sparks do not.
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