GWizard: The Ultimate CNC Feeds & Speeds Calculator

Mastering Feeds & Speeds with GWizard — A Beginner’s Guide

What this guide covers

  • Purpose: Learn how to use GWizard to calculate feeds, speeds, and cutting parameters for CNC milling and turning.
  • Audience: Beginners with basic CNC knowledge who want practical, step-by-step instructions.
  • Outcome: Be able to produce safe, efficient cutting parameters and understand the trade-offs between speed, tool life, and surface finish.

Quick overview of GWizard

  • GWizard is a feeds & speeds calculator tailored for CNC machining that helps choose spindle speed (RPM), feed rate, chip load, and cutting depth based on tool, material, and machine constraints.
  • It reduces trial-and-error, helps prevent tool breakage, and can extend tool life by optimizing parameters.

Step-by-step beginner workflow

  1. Set machine limits
    • Enter your machine’s maximum RPM, maximum feed rate, and maximum horsepower/torque.
  2. Select material
    • Choose the workpiece material (e.g., 6061 aluminum, mild steel, stainless) so the software can apply appropriate cutting data.
  3. Pick the tool
    • Enter or choose tool diameter, number of flutes, coating, and material (carbide/HSS).
  4. Define operation
    • Select milling vs turning, and the operation type (slotting, side milling, drilling, etc.). Specify axial and radial depths of cut.
  5. Generate parameters
    • Let GWizard compute RPM, feed rate, chip load per tooth, and estimated horsepower. Review recommended adjustments for tool life vs productivity.
  6. Simulate and adjust
    • Use conservative starting values if unsure. Increase speeds gradually while monitoring tool wear, chatter, and part finish.
  7. Document and save
    • Save setups for recurring jobs and note any shop-specific tweaks (coolant use, tooling brands).

Key concepts explained

  • Chip load (IPT/MMT): The thickness of material removed per tooth—primary determinant of tool life.
  • Surface speed (SFM/M/min): Material-dependent suggested cutting speed; higher speeds increase productivity but can shorten tool life.
  • Axial vs radial depth of cut: Axial is lengthwise engagement; radial is side engagement. Radial engagement has a larger effect on cutting forces.
  • Material removal rate (MRR): Volume removed per minute; balances productivity with power and tool limits.

Practical tips for beginners

  • Start conservative: Use lower RPM/feed than the maximum recommendation for your first run.
  • Watch for chatter: Reduce radial engagement or speed if you hear vibration.
  • Use proper coolant: Especially for ferrous materials to manage heat and chip evacuation.
  • Keep a log: Track what worked for each tool/material combination to build a shop database.
  • Use chip thinning adjustments when machining with small stepovers or high helix angles.

Common beginner mistakes

  • Using too high a feed for a small-diameter tool.
  • Ignoring machine power limits—overloading causes poor finish and tool failure.
  • Neglecting tool runout and spindle condition—these dramatically affect recommended chip loads.

Quick reference checklist

  • Machine limits set ✓
  • Material selected ✓
  • Tool data entered ✓
  • Operation and depths defined ✓
  • Conservative trial run executed ✓
  • Adjust and document ✓

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