Most labs don't choose wet or dry milling because they love one method. They choose it because the material and the clinical expectation demand it. The mistake happens when “wet vs dry” turns into daily workflow chaos—constant cleaning, frequent conversions, and avoidable downtime.
A more practical approach is to treat wet and dry as two modes with different jobs, then structure your workflow so both can run smoothly without creating confusion on the floor.

1) The real question isn't wet or dry—it's “what does the material need?”
In everyday lab production, the decision is usually driven by three variables:
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Heat and chip control (does the cut generate heat that should be managed?)
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Surface integrity (does the material benefit from coolant to maintain edge quality?)
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Cleanliness and contamination (what dust/chips are created, and how do we manage them?)
From there, the typical material logic looks like this:
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Wet milling is commonly preferred for: glass ceramics and workflows where controlled cooling is part of protecting surface quality and managing chips.
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Dry milling is commonly preferred for: zirconia and many resin materials, where dust management and stable dry operation are the priority.
For metal, especially titanium, wet workflows are often chosen when cooling and chip control help keep cutting behavior stable on demanding jobs. But “wet” doesn't automatically mean “better.” It means the process needs controlled cooling for that application.
2) Avoid the common trap: switching modes too often
Many teams assume, “If a machine can do both, we should use both whenever we want.” In real production, frequent switching can create:
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Extra cleaning and setup time
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Higher risk of contamination (dust vs coolant environments)
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More operator variability
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More maintenance interruptions
A smarter approach is to plan by workflow blocks, for example:
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Dry production runs for your routine daily output
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Wet configuration used when the process genuinely benefits from controlled cooling
This is exactly where “flexibility” should help—not by encouraging constant change, but by giving you options when you need them.
3) What “flexible workflow” should look like in a lab
If you want wet + dry capability without disruption, focus on three things:
A) Keep preparation standardized
Mode changes and job preparation need a consistent process. When different operators “do it their own way,” you'll see quality variation and more troubleshooting.
B) Make the status visible
A simple display and guided steps reduce mis-steps. The best systems make it obvious: What mode is configured? What job is running? What checks are needed?
C) Keep CAM decisions clean
The CAM stage should reduce operator stress, not add to it. Consistent nesting, stable toolpath generation, and simulation/risk preview help stop problems before they reach the machine.
4) Where CAM software quietly determines your success rate
Many labs underestimate how much CAM affects daily workflow stability. The CAM layer decides:
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How tools engage the material
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Where load spikes happen
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How finishing passes handle edges and critical surfaces
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Whether risks can be previewed before milling
This is where a nesting and CAM workflow built for real production makes a difference. A guided interface, fast toolpath generation, and simulation reduce trial-and-error. That's also why many labs prefer a CAM solution that is tightly aligned with the machine—strategy updates are faster, and the workflow feels more consistent.
5) Bringing metal in-house: what changes, and what shouldn't
When labs add metal capacity, the goal isn't to rebuild the entire digital workflow. The goal is to expand capability while keeping the process familiar:
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Same data flow from CAD to CAM
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Same preparation logic and job management
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Less operator dependence on “tribal knowledge”
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Output that stays consistent across long-run jobs
A metal-capable system should feel like a natural extension of your lab workflow—not a separate “special machine” that only one person can run.
A practical way to think about dual-mode capability
If your lab's daily output is mostly dry production, dual-mode capability should not force you into mode switching. It should give you a controlled option for cases that truly benefit from coolant—without disrupting the rest of your workflow.
That's the direction UP3D is taking with its integrated lab ecosystem. UPCAM is designed as a smart nesting CAM workflow, and when paired with a platform like IRON CORE i5 PRO, labs can run most day-to-day output efficiently in dry production—while still having a wet configuration available when controlled cooling is required.
Closing thought
Wet vs dry isn't a debate to “win.” It's a decision to manage. When you treat each mode as a purposeful workflow, standardize preparation, and rely on CAM tools that reduce guesswork, you get the real benefit: fewer interruptions, smoother production, and more consistent delivery—regardless of the material on the schedule.










