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Use this decision guide to read machine specs, spot lathe-first geometry, and separate machine cost from part cost. Lecreator supports CNC turning, mill-turn work, Swiss-type turning, prototype parts, and production turning for buyers who need finished parts rather than a new machine on the floor.
| Meilleur ajustement | Shafts, pins, bushings, spacers, threaded inserts, sleeves, nozzles, pulleys, and turned housings. |
|---|---|
| Machine specs that matter | Spindle, rpm, chuck or collet, bar capacity, X/Z travel, turret, live tooling, coolant, enclosure, controller, and inspection access. |
| Service bridge | Lecreator lists 2-axis CNC turning, live tooling, Swiss-type turning, rapid prototyping, production turning, and secondary operations. |
| Public Lecreator claims | Turning tolerance to +/-0.0005 in, 50+ materials, fastest lead time of 3 days, and quality language that includes AS9100D, ISO 13485, and IATF 16949. |

CNC lathes rotate a workpiece while a tool removes material. That makes the process naturally strong for round metal geometry: diameters, shoulders, grooves, threads, bores, tapers, chamfers, and faces. Geometry becomes a fit problem when the drawing has more flat faces, pockets, deep off-axis features, or complex side geometry than round features.
The word “lathe” can also create confusion. Manual engine lathes, mini lathes, turning lathes, and computer controlled turning centers may all rotate a part, but they differ in axis control, repeatability, workholding, operator burden, enclosure, coolant, and inspection needs. For production runs, the real comparison is rarely “lathe or no lathe.” It is usually “lathe-only, mill-turn, CNC mill, Swiss machine, or service quote.”

Start with geometry, not with a machine catalog. If most value is created by controlling diameters around one centerline, the part is probably lathe-first. If the drawing depends on broad prismatic faces, multiple pockets, or off-axis features, it may need milling, live tooling, wire EDM, or a second operation.
| Part family | Why it is lathe-first | Point de surveillance |
|---|---|---|
| Shaft | Diameters, shoulders, grooves, and faces share a centerline. | Long length-to-diameter ratios can need support. |
| Dowel pin | Straight OD, chamfers, and length control suit turning. | Finish and hardness may move work to grinding. |
| Bushing | OD, ID, bore, and face relationships can be held in one setup. | Thin walls can move during clamp and cut. |
| Spacer | Simple length, OD, ID, and chamfer control. | Burr control matters at volume. |
| Threaded insert | External and internal threads align with the spindle axis. | Thread gauge, pitch, class, and lead-in should be specified. |
| Pulley | Grooves and concentric bores are natural lathe work. | Keyways may need milling or broaching. |
| Nozzle | Tapers, bores, seats, and threads are centerline features. | Small deep holes can control cycle time. |
| Connector body | Round shell, bore, and thread features suit a turning center. | Flats, slots, and cross-holes add live tooling or milling. |
| Turned housing | Concentric seats and faces can be cut from billet or bar. | Pockets and bolt patterns may move the job to mill-turn. |
Scenario 1: prototype shaft. One product engineer needs 12 stainless steel shafts with two diameters, one M6 thread, and a bearing seat. The print has no pockets, no flats, and no side holes. That is a clean cnc turning candidate, even if a buyer first searched for a cnc lathe machine. Useful quote data is not a machine brand; it is material grade, OD tolerance, thread class, bearing-seat finish, quantity, and inspection method. If the next revision adds a cross-hole or a wrench flat, the part may still start on a lathe, but it could need live tooling, a second milling setup, or a handoff to Swiss machining for small, long features.

The named framework below is the core decision point: the 6-Input Lathe-or-Service Fit Test. It separates ownership logic from part-buying logic. Owning a machine tool can make sense when repeat demand, operator time, inspection gear, and floor capacity all line up. Quoting a Service de tournage CNC makes more sense when the part is urgent, low volume, hard to inspect, material-sensitive, or likely to change.
| Input | Buy signal | Quote signal |
|---|---|---|
| Annual volume | Stable repeat production runs fill the machine. | Prototype or irregular demand. |
| Tolérance | Existing inspection gear can measure the drawing. | Tight tolerance, GD&T, or CMM reporting is required. |
| Matériel | Known aluminum, brass, or free-machining steel work. | Titanium, stainless steel, hardened alloy, or difficult plastic behavior. |
| Utilization | Spindle hours justify machine, tooling, coolant, and maintenance. | The machine would sit idle between jobs. |
| Operator skill | A machinist can program, set tools, prove out, and adjust offsets. | No trained operator or setup support. |
| Inspection burden | Shop already has gauges, micrometers, thread gauges, and reports. | Customer needs material certs, first article, CMM, or PPAP. |
| Geometry change rate | Drawing is locked. | Design is still moving across prototype rounds. |
| Secondary operations | Only turning and simple drill work are needed. | Heat treatment, grinding, plating, engraving, or assembly is required. |
| Schedule risk | Internal queue is predictable. | Parts are needed faster than a machine purchase, install, and prove-out cycle. |
Scenario 2: buyer stuck between machine and service. Suppose a small hardware team wants 200 brass threaded inserts per month. One mini lathe could make early samples, but the buyer also needs consistent thread gauging, burr control, material traceability, and a backup plan when demand jumps to 2,000 pieces. The 6-input test points toward a hybrid path: use simple in-house samples for fit checks, then quote the production geometry through a turning provider. This protects cash from sitting inside a machine, collet set, tool holders, coolant, inspection gear, and operator training before the design is stable.

Spec sheets look similar until the part drawing enters the discussion. Collet size, an 8 in chuck, a tailstock, a bar feeder, a turret, a sub-spindle, Y-axis live tooling, and a coolant system all change what can be made without extra setups. Public machine examples also show why price comparison is hard: compact packages may list a 1.5 hp spindle and 180-5000 rpm, while larger CNC metal lathes are sold around swing, spindle bore, center distance, and support for heavy work.
When comparing a machine envelope with a service quote, group the drawing by dimensional bands: 0.25 in pins, 0.5 in spacers, 1 in bushings, 2 in housings, 8 in chuck work, 12 in diameter parts, and 24 in length parts all create different workholding and inspection questions.
| Spec | Pourquoi ça compte | RFQ translation |
|---|---|---|
| Spindle power and rpm | Controls torque, speed, and ability to cut metal without chatter. | Share material, OD, finish, and tolerance. |
| Chuck or collet | Affects grip, runout, changeover, and surface marking. | Call out cosmetic zones and concentricity needs. |
| Bar capacity | Sets max stock diameter for bar-fed work. | Provide stock size if known. |
| Tailstock | Supports long parts during turning. | Flag slender shafts early. |
| Outillage en direct | Adds drilling, flats, slots, and light milling operations on the turning center. | Mark cross-holes, flats, and angular features. |
| Sub-spindle | Can finish the back side without manual re-clamp. | Show back-face features clearly. |
| Guidage | Supports small, long, slender work near the cut. | Consider a Swiss lathe path for small shafts and pins. |
| Enclosure and guarding | Protects around rotating work, chips, coolant, and pinch points. | Ask how the setup handles exposed workholding hazards. |
For turning, spindle speed changes with part diameter. The University of Florida machining lab gives the common formula N = 12 * V / (pi * D), where N is rpm, V is surface speed in feet per minute, and D is diameter in inches. That means a 0.25 in work piece and a 2 in workpiece do not use the same rpm at the same surface speed. The same source also cautions students to cap speed under certain chuck-safety conditions in its lab setting, which is a reminder that rpm is not chosen from a table alone.

Material choice changes heat, tool wear, chip control, coolant needs, burr behavior, and surface finish. Aluminum may cut fast, brass can machine cleanly, stainless steel can work harden, titanium carries heat poorly, plastics can move under clamp pressure, and hardened steels may need a different process chain. Lecreator lists dedicated material paths for usinage CNC en aluminium, usinage CNC en acier inoxydable, et usinage CNC en titane.
Tolerance also needs careful wording. Service pages can list a capability such as +/-0.0005 in, but a drawing still has to define which diameter, length, bore, thread, runout, position, flatness, or surface finish is critical. The ISO dimensional and geometrical specification catalogue points to separate standards for linear size tolerances, geometrical product specifications, and datum references, including ISO 286-1, ISO 286-2, ISO 1101, and ISO 5459.
| Matériel | Turning risk | What to specify |
|---|---|---|
| Aluminium | Burrs, finish marks, thread quality. | Alloy, finish, deburr limits, cosmetic zones. |
| Acier inoxydable | Work hardening, tool wear, heat, burrs. | Grade, passivation need, critical diameters. |
| Titane | Heat, tool life, deflection, galling. | Grade, finish, inspection plan, batch quantity. |
| Brass and copper | Surface marks and chip behavior vary by alloy. | Alloy number, lead-free need, cosmetic limits. |
| Plastique | Clamp distortion, heat movement, burrs, and fuzz. | Material grade, use temperature, flatness, and finish. |
For a production project, the RFQ should connect the drawing to a project timeline, throughput baseline, inspection baseline, and expected production outcome. Ask whether the supplier can separate a 3 days prototype need from a 6 months bridge build, a 12 months repeat order, or a 24 months ownership comparison. For turned-part capacity, Lecreator’s public pages list CNC machining turning capacity at 12 in diameter by 24 in length and a turning page capacity at max diameter 24 in and length 36 in; those numbers should be checked against the actual drawing before any case study, in-house sample, or production outcome is treated as comparable.
Scenario 3: tolerance trap. One buyer asks for every diameter on a stainless sleeve to be held to +/-0.0005 in because a service page lists that number. The machinist reads the drawing and sees one bearing seat that matters, two non-critical spacer diameters, a thin wall, and a thread with no gauge callout. Better RFQ wording marks the bearing seat as critical, relaxes non-functional diameters, defines the thread requirement, and asks for the inspection method. That change can lower scrap risk without weakening the design intent.

Public machine examples show why the cost question needs context. Compact CNC lathe packages may be advertised in the low five figures, while commercial cost guides place entry-level 2-axis lathes in the $15,000-$50,000 range and production lathes in the $50,000-$300,000 range. Those numbers are only purchase context. They do not include tooling, collets, coolant, software, inspection equipment, fixtures, maintenance, operator time, scrap, or secondary operations.
A useful answer is a range with a caveat: a small or entry-level CNC lathe may start in low five figures, while production turning centers can reach six figures before accessories. The real breakpoint is not the sticker price. It is the expected cost per usable part after setup, tool wear, inspection, rework, idle time, and labor are counted.
| Conducteur de coûts | Machine ownership effect | Service quote effect |
|---|---|---|
| Configuration | Paid in staff time and scrap. | Built into quote and amortized by quantity. |
| Outillage | Tool holders, inserts, drills, boring bars, gauges. | Provider selects process tooling. |
| Inspection | Micrometers, thread gauges, CMM access, records. | Requested reports add cost but reduce internal burden. |
| Matériel | Buyer carries drops, scrap, and ordering risk. | Quote can include material and cert needs. |
| Schedule | Machine install and prove-out may delay first usable parts. | A provider with capacity can quote prototype and production timing. |

A clear RFQ beats a long email. If the part is already headed to a Service d'usinage CNC, give the supplier enough detail to choose a lathe, Swiss machine, mill-turn center, or secondary process without guessing.
For small shafts, medical pins, connectors, and miniature turned components, ask early whether a Swiss route is a fit. For parts that combine turning with flats, slots, and cross-holes, ask whether live tooling or usinage multitâche can reduce extra setups. For sharp internal corners, fine slots, or hardened materials outside a lathe’s comfort zone, câble EDM may belong in the process plan.

A turned part can look simple and still fail inspection. Decide what evidence you need before production starts, especially for aerospace, medical, automotive, robotics, fluid control, and industrial equipment. Lecreator’s public pages reference ISO 9001, AS9100D, ISO 13485, and IATF 16949 language across CNC machining and turning pages; buyers should match those quality claims to the document package needed for the order.
| Buyer context | Common evidence to request |
|---|---|
| Prototype fit check | Basic dimensional inspection on critical features. |
| Aerospace bracket or actuator part | Material cert, CoC, first article, and controlled revision record. |
| Medical device component | Material traceability, cleaning notes, inspection record, and lot control. |
| Automotive production item | PPAP, control plan, gauge method, and repeatability data when required. |
| General industrial spare | Drawing revision, material grade, inspection on functional diameters, and finish confirmation. |
NIST researchers Laetitia Monnier, William Z. Bernstein, and Sebti Foufou frame the digital thread as a way to connect NC code, machine-controller data, and inspection evidence so manufacturing data can be interpreted across systems rather than trapped at one machine, as described in a 2023 NIST publication on NC and MTConnect data.

The strongest trend signal is not a single market-size number. It is the shift toward connected cells, fewer setups, more automation around turning centers, and closer links between machining and inspection data. NIST’s Smart Manufacturing Systems Test Bed includes CNC turning, CNC milling, CMM, digital micrometers, CAD/CAM/CAI/PDM, and MTConnect data collection, which shows where industrial research attention is going.
Trade sources also point toward bar feeders, robotic tending, IoT-connected machines, multi-axis capability, and compact automated cells. For buyers, the action is practical: quote parts with enough detail that a supplier can choose between 2-axis turning, live tooling, Swiss-type turning, mill-turn work, and secondary operations. Flexible sourcing may beat buying a machine when product demand is uncertain.
The CNC metal lathe is the machine. CNC turning is the machining operation that rotates the workpiece while cutting tools remove material. Service providers may run 2-axis turning, live tooling, Swiss turning, or mill-turn processes depending on the drawing.
Yes, but material grade, heat, tool wear, coolant, workholding, and tolerance matter. Stainless steel and titanium usually need more process control than aluminum or brass.
Use milling when the main features are flat faces, pockets, broad slots, off-axis contours, or prismatic geometry. Side-featured turned parts may still be made with live tooling or mill-turn work.
Only when volume, machine utilization, operator skill, tooling, and inspection support justify ownership. For prototypes, unstable designs, difficult materials, or short runs, quoting service is often the lower-risk path.
It depends on diameter, length, material, wall thickness, tool access, workholding, and inspection method. Treat public tolerance claims as capability signals, then mark the critical features on the drawing.
Send a CAD file, 2D drawing, material, quantity, tolerances, thread callouts, surface finish, inspection needs, certificate needs, and target schedule. Mention any current process problems or past failures.
If your drawing is lathe-first, send Lecreator the CAD file, drawing, material, quantity, tolerance, finish, inspection needs, and deadline. The team can route the work through CNC turning, Swiss-type turning, live tooling, or broader custom CNC machining when the geometry needs more than a lathe-only process.