Composite materials are favourited in manufacturing due to their high strength-to-weight ratio, specifically, for performance-critical applications, where reducing weight directly enhances efficiency, speed, and fuel consumption [1]. Additionally, their corrosion resistance and design flexibility, allow manufacturers to create highly specialised components that are used across multiple industries such as aerospace and automotive [2].
However, manufacturing composites presents different challenges compared to traditional metals – drilling, especially, unlike milling or turning, is particularly complex due to their heterogeneous nature and the continuous tool engagement throughout the cutting [3]. Exactaform’s engineering approach to drilling in composites focuses on tool innovation, process optimisation, and machining strategies that allow manufacturers to drill composites more efficiently, with higher precision and extended tool life.
Traditional metals, like aluminium, steel, and titanium are homogeneous, meaning they have consistent mechanical properties throughout. In contrast, composites consist of multiple bonded layers, often with reinforcing fibres embedded in a polymer matrix. Even though, these fibres provide structural strength, the downside is that they are highly abrasive, while the matrix is prone to heat-related damage. [4] [5]
Furthermore, composites are anisotropic, meaning their strength and mechanical behaviour vary depending on fibre orientation, resin distribution, and layering. This makes them behave differently under machining forces which makes their manufacturing even more challenging. [5]
Drilling in composites requires a high understanding of tool mechanics, material properties, and process control. Rather than just following a general approach, Exactaform’s process can be broken down into three main points.
A traditional drill often struggles with composites due to its inefficient dust evacuation. As composites produce fine dust-like debris, they require specific cutting geometries and high-performance cutting tool materials to maintain manufacturing efficiency and tool longevity.
For hybrid stacks (e.g., CFRP-Titanium or CFRP-Aluminium), carbide drills with coolant-through capability improve tool life and thermal control.
Fibre brittleness and heat dissipation can be minimised by optimising cutting speeds and monitoring cutting forces. Exactaform’s engineers create tools that are adjusted to fibre orientation and resin composition; we perform predictable tool testing in house and can advise on cutting force monitoring and heat build-up evaluation post-production. General things to consider:
Beyond tool and parameter selection, maintaining process stability ensures consistency and long-term efficiency. Effective dust evacuation and dust control play a crucial role in this, with dry drilling and minimum quantity lubrication (MQL) as the two primary approaches.
Our 45 years of expertise in PCD and carbide tooling is backed by application-driven innovation. We help manufacturers find the best tooling solution through developing the right combination of drills, cutting parameters, and process control techniques to ensure cleaner cuts, longer tool life, and higher machining efficiency.