
When components are heat-treated to high hardness (typically above 45 HRC), finishing them to precise dimensions and surface finish presents a choice: hard turning or grinding. Each method offers distinct advantages. At Juize Machinery, we employ both, selecting the optimal process based on component geometry, tolerance requirements, and production volume. As a Gold Verified Supplier on Alibaba, our finishing capabilities ensure hardened components meet specifications efficiently.
What Is Hard Turning?
Hard turning uses lathes or turning centers with specialized cutting tool materials (CBN, ceramic, or advanced carbide) to machine parts after heat treatment. Typical hardness range: 45–68 HRC.
Advantages of Hard Turning:
Geometric flexibility: Complex profiles, shoulders, and undercuts can be turned in one setup
Fast setup: No wheel dressing or balancing required
Dry machining possible: Many hard turning operations run without coolant
Lower equipment cost: Standard CNC lathes with rigid construction suffice
Ideal for small batches: No grinding wheel inventory
Limitations of Hard Turning:
Surface finish limitations: Typically achieves Ra 0.4–1.6 µm; finer finishes difficult
Size limitations: Small-diameter parts may lack rigidity
Tool wear: CBN tools are expensive; interrupted cuts reduce tool life
Heat generation: Can cause metallurgical damage if not controlled
When to Use Grinding
Grinding uses abrasive wheels to remove material, achieving exceptional precision and surface finish. Typical hardness range: 50–70+ HRC.
Advantages of Grinding:
Superior surface finish: Achieves Ra 0.05–0.4 µm or finer
Tight tolerances: ±0.002 mm or better achievable
Ideal for small diameters: Thin parts can be ground without deflection
Excellent for interrupted cuts: Abrasive wheels handle keyways and splines better than CBN tools
Burns and metallurgical damage less likely when properly applied
Limitations of Grinding:
Geometric constraints: Complex profiles require form wheels or multiple setups
Slower cycle times: Material removal rates lower than turning
Coolant required: Most grinding operations need flood coolant
Higher equipment cost: Precision grinders and dressing equipment expensive
Our Selection Guidelines
| Requirement | Hard Turning | Grinding |
| Surface finish Ra < 0.2 µm | ❌ Not recommended | ✅ Preferred |
| Tight tolerance (< ±0.005 mm) | ❌ Difficult | ✅ Preferred |
| Complex profile (one setup) | ✅ Preferred | ❌ Requires multiple ops |
| Small batch size (< 50 pcs) | ✅ Preferred | ❌ Wheel cost not justified |
| Large diameter (> 200 mm) | ✅ Preferred | ❌ Grinding wheel costly |
| Interrupted cut (keyways, splines) | ❌ Tool wear high | ✅ Preferred |
| Low volume, odd geometry | ✅ Preferred | ❌ High setup time |
Hybrid Approach
For demanding components, we combine methods:
Hard turn roughing to remove bulk material
Grinding finish for critical diameters and seals
Hard turn finish for non-critical profiles
Quality Verification
Both processes undergo rigorous inspection:
Surface finish measurement (profilometer)
Dimensional inspection (CMM or air gaging)
Burn testing (Barkhausen noise or etching) for ground surfaces

