Industry · Sector

Mold & Die Making

Single-source cutting tools and holders that protect surface finish and tool life on hardened steel molds.

In One Sentence

Mazteknik supplies plastic injection and metal mold makers with carbide end mills, EDM electrodes, metrology and technical hardware that protect surface finish on hardened steel — from a single source.

Mold-Making Processes

A typical injection mold or stamping die runs through:

  • Soft milling (annealed steel) — pocket roughing
  • Heat treatment (HRC 48–58)
  • Hard milling — high-precision finishing on hardened surfaces
  • EDM (sinker + wire) — sharp corners, deep ribs, fine cavities
  • Polishing — final finish (Ra < 0.1 µm for mirror)
  • Inspection + assembly — try-out and shut-tests

The right tool and holder at every stage can double or triple mold life.

Tooling for Hardened Steel

Operation Recommended Tool Strategy
HRC 50–55 hard milling TiSiN-coated carbide ball end mill High Vc, low ae/ap, single pass
HRC 55+ hard milling CBN insert end mill Continuous lubrication, small steps
High-precision finish Precision holder (HSK, ER) 0.005–0.01 mm runout
EDM graphite electrode Polished carbide end mill High RPM, MQL
Sharp corner Wire + sinker EDM Wire: brass + zinc-coated
Polishing Diamond paste + felt Manual or auto-head

How Mazteknik Approaches Mold Making

For mold makers we stock hard-milling end mills from AKKO, Vergnano, Mimatic, Iscar — ready to ship. When carbide ball end mills lose geometry, send them to our Tool Regrinding service rather than scrapping; the Zoller Genius 3 restores them at micron precision.

We also stock Insize and Mitutoyo comparators and Zoller presetters for mold try-out. Mold base hardware (pressure pads, slide plates, leader pins) is hard to source from one vendor — we handle that too.

Frequently Asked

How do we avoid surface micro-cracks on hardened steel? Small-step (ae < 0.1·D) high-speed strategy is the key to thermal control. Multiple light passes beat a single deep pass — the tool stays out of thermal-shock territory.

Carbide or CBN? For HRC 50–55, carbide is economical. Above HRC 55, CBN delivers 5–10× the tool life. The CBN insert costs more up front but pays back over the run.

Which holder standard for mold try-out? HSK and BIG-PLUS are standard in mold shops. Choose them over BT/CAT — repeatability is 2–3× better.

Vendor mix

Brands we trust for Mold & Die Making

These are the manufacturers we lean on most when equipping a shop in this industry — sourced direct, supported in the field.