Finishing Services

Tumbling

At a glance

Applicable Materials

Colors

n/a

Texture

Slightly rounded edges, smooth, slightly matte finish, does not hide all machine marks

Can be applied with

Any finish

About the Process

Tumbling is a finishing process that is used to clean, deburr, and slightly smooth smaller parts. Tumbling uses a horizontal drum where parts are placed, along with a media, such as sand or ceramic chips. The drum rotates slowly, causing the media to slide repeatedly over the parts, breaking any sharp edges and lightly smoothing the surface. Tumbling is fairly inexpensive due to the small amount of manual labor involved to run the process.

Design considerations

  • Because parts cannot be masked prior to tumbling, consider adding features such as threads and engravings after this process.
  • Tumbling is a rough process, so parts with thin features are not ideal for this finishing option.

YOU MIGHT ALSO BE INTERESTED IN

Scaling CNC to Casting Guide

How to Transition from CNC Machining to Casting for Production Scale Identifying the Right Parts for Casting CNC vs. Casting: Fundamental Differences Casting Process Selection (DFM) Design Adjustments for Transitioning from CNC to Casting Casting Design for Manufacturability (DFM) Considerations Materials & Performance Considerations Hybrid Strategy: Casting + CNC Finishing Simulation & Validation Tooling & […]

Learn More

Prototyping Lead Time: Process Timelines and How to Reduce Delays

Prototyping lead time is often framed as a simple question: “How long will it take to get my part?” In reality, the answer is rarely determined by machine time alone. A prototype expected in days can easily take weeks—not because of production constraints, but because of delays in quoting, design iteration, manufacturability feedback, and supplier […]

Learn More