Milling direction relative to the feed defines two methods that behave very differently, and choosing the right one affects finish, tool life, and safety.
Climb milling
The cutter rotates with the feed direction, so each tooth starts in thick material and exits thin. This gives a better finish, less heat, and longer tool life, and it’s the default on rigid modern CNC machines. The catch: it pulls the work and can grab dangerously on machines with backlash, like manual mills without anti-backlash.
Conventional milling
The cutter rotates against the feed, so teeth start thin and build to thick — they tend to rub at entry, generating heat and a rougher finish, but it’s safer on machines with backlash and can be better for hard or scaled surfaces.
| Climb | Conventional | |
|---|---|---|
| Chip | Thick → thin | Thin → thick |
| Finish | Better | Rougher |
| Best on | Rigid CNC | Manual/backlash machines |
Rule of thumb: climb mill on rigid CNC for finish and tool life; use conventional for roughing scaled stock or on machines with backlash.
Frequently asked questions
Which gives a better finish? Climb milling.
Why can climb milling be risky? On machines with backlash it can grab the work.
Which for a manual mill? Conventional, unless you have anti-backlash.
On a CNC with ballscrews and no backlash, there’s rarely a reason not to climb mill the finishing pass. Some machinists rough conventionally on hard or scaled stock, then switch to a climb pass for the finish — getting the best of both methods.
