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How to Boost Milling Speed — Without Losing a Micron of Accuracy
18 июля 2025

Speed and precision — in dental milling, they often seem to pull in opposite directions. If you try to mill faster, you worry about losing detail or creating a poor marginal fit. If you focus only on precision, productivity can take a hit. But does it have to be a trade-off?

Not necessarily.

With the right approach, many labs are discovering that you can accelerate your workflow and maintain the fine detail today’s restorations demand. The key lies in a few subtle — yet impactful — changes to your daily routine.

Here are five small adjustments that can help you improve cutting speed without compromising the quality your lab is known for.

 

UP3D dental milling machines lineup including P55D, P53, and P53DC for dental labs and clinics

Start with Smarter Tool Choices

Not all burs are created equal, and not every tool works well across every material. If you're still using the same toolset for zirconia, PMMA, and hybrid ceramics, it's time to reconsider.

For example, zirconia typically benefits from two- or three-flute burs that evacuate chips efficiently and reduce heat buildup. Polymers like PMMA often mill better with single-flute burs that slice rather than grind — lowering surface tension and cutting cleaner. And if you're milling long-span bridges or full-arch cases, diamond-coated tools can offer longer life without sacrificing edge sharpness.

Paying attention to tool geometry can also make a difference. Even a minor change in edge radius can influence surface finish, especially on thin veneers or tight margins.

One final tip: don’t wait for visible wear. If your CAM software allows for tool life tracking, like UP3D’s UPCNC, use it. Replacing tools at the right moment can prevent a cascade of reworks.

Fine-Tune Your Machine Parameters

Most machines ship with conservative default settings — designed for safety and general use. But once you’re familiar with your materials and workloads, you can go further.

Begin by reviewing your spindle speed and feed rate. Increasing spindle RPM without adjusting feed rate can lead to polishing instead of cutting, especially in dense materials like zirconia. What you want is a balance that keeps chip load consistent — that’s where real cutting efficiency happens.

Another area to consider is step-over. Reducing the step-over slightly on margin areas (from, say, 10% to 8%) may improve surface detail, while increasing it on internal areas can save time without affecting fit. And if your machine allows for servo tuning or acceleration adjustment, tweaking these for specific materials can noticeably reduce vibrations during fine milling.

These are small tweaks, but together, they add up.

Don't Let Heat Ruin a Perfect Restoration

It’s easy to underestimate how much thermal buildup can affect both precision and tool life. Whether you’re using a dry or wet milling system, keeping temperatures under control is crucial.

 

Technician inspecting restorations inside UP3D dental milling machine

In dry milling setups — especially compressor-free models like UP3D’s P55D — ensuring airflow is properly directed makes a difference. Clean, angled airflow (positioned just ahead of the cutting edge) helps remove chips efficiently and minimizes dust buildup around margins.

If you’re working with wet systems, the coolant you choose matters. Low-quality liquids can be slightly acidic or retain moisture, leading to micro-distortion in hybrid ceramics. A neutral, high-grade coolant helps avoid this while also protecting internal components.

For polymer materials like PMMA, static is often the real enemy. That’s why ionizer-equipped systems like P55D or P53DC are gaining attention — they reduce static cling, improve dust evacuation, and result in cleaner finishes with less manual polishing.

Choose Materials with Milling in Mind

It’s tempting to just grab the disc you have on hand. But choosing the right material — in the right format — can actually save you minutes per case.

Take zirconia discs as an example. If you're milling a single crown, using a 20 mm disc might be overkill. The excess thickness adds unnecessary Z-travel and prolongs cutting time. Switching to a thinner 12 mm disc speeds things up and preserves machine life.

Multi-layer zirconia requires even more consideration. To preserve natural shading and translucency, you need to orient the restoration precisely within the disc. Software like UPCAM can help you do this automatically, but it only works if the correct material is chosen from the start.

And don’t forget: not everything needs to be milled from a full disc. Lithium disilicate or composite blocks, especially when used with custom block clamps like BK-1, are faster to set up and often complete milling in significantly less time for small restorations.

Let CAM Strategy Work in Your Favor

You don’t need to be a CAM expert to see results — but knowing the basics of strategy can give your mill a real edge.

Switching to adaptive roughing strategies, where the tool maintains a constant chip load, can shorten roughing passes by over 20%. For margin precision, a light “pencil” pass with reduced step-over can refine edges without adding more than a minute of machining time.

Some advanced CAM platforms (like UPCAM’s 2025 version) even adjust toolpath strategy automatically based on restoration geometry. So whether you're doing a full contour molar or a thin anterior veneer, the software selects the most efficient combination of passes — reducing both operator guesswork and chairside delays.

It’s like having a CAM specialist on standby, without the overhead.

It's the Small Things That Add Up

In dental milling, speed and precision aren’t enemies — they’re collaborators, if you know how to manage the details.

Choosing the right tool, tuning your settings, keeping the temperature stable, matching the material, and optimizing your strategy: none of these steps require major investment. But together, they can dramatically shorten your cycle times while keeping your quality where it needs to be.

And when you combine these best practices with systems designed for modern digital workflows — like the P55D’s compressor-free milling, or P53DC’s intelligent material management — you’re not just faster. You’re smarter.

Want to learn how to optimize your milling setup for your lab’s unique needs? Reach out to our team — we’re here to help.

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