The cheapest part to redesign is the one that’s still in CAD. The most expensive is the one that came back from the shop with a 6-week lead time and a four-figure invoice because nobody asked whether a 0.060″ wall could actually be milled.
Design for Manufacturability — DFM — is the practice of making design decisions with the manufacturing process in mind before a single chip flies. It is not a separate step at the end. It is the difference between a $400 prototype and a $40 production part that behaves identically.
Here are the twelve decisions we walk every PartSnap client through before quoting a job. Most projects we audit have leverage in at least half of them.
1. Pick the process before you finalize the geometry
CNC milling, turning, sheet-metal forming, casting, injection molding, and 3D printing each have geometry vocabularies. Designing a part as if it will be machined and then trying to injection-mold it is how you end up with sink marks, draft violations, and tool damage. Decide on a process first. The geometry follows.
2. Match your tolerance to the function, not your CAD precision
CAD will happily give you nine decimal places. The shop floor will not. A ±0.005″ tolerance is twice the cost of ±0.010″ on a typical machined feature, and ±0.0005″ can be ten times the cost of ±0.005″. If a hole is a clearance hole for a bolt, give it a clearance-hole tolerance — not a press-fit tolerance.
3. Choose materials that the local supply chain stocks
6061-T6 aluminum, 304 stainless, 1018 cold-rolled, brass C360 — these ship same-day from any decent metals distributor. Specifying 7075-T7351 plate in 1.25″ thickness, or PEEK in a non-standard rod, will add a week and several hundred dollars to your prototype before a single setup happens.
4. Respect minimum wall thickness
For machined aluminum, anything under 0.040″ is asking for chatter, deflection, and rework. For injection-molded ABS, anything under 0.030″ risks short shots. For SLA-printed parts, walls below 0.6 mm warp on the build plate. Every process has a minimum wall thickness, and your CAD should not violate it.
5. Use standard tooling — drills, taps, end mills
Specifying a 0.183″-diameter hole on a drawing means a custom reamer. Specifying a #13 drill (0.185″) means an off-the-shelf tool. The hole does the same job. The first one adds $80 to your part because the shop has to buy a tool they will never use again.
6. Minimize setups
Every time a part is unclamped, flipped, re-fixtured, and re-zeroed, you are paying for setup time and you are introducing positional error between features. A part designed to be machined from one side is dramatically cheaper than the same part with critical features on five faces. If you can move a feature to a face that is already being touched, do it.
7. Avoid deep, narrow pockets
A pocket that is 4× deeper than it is wide requires a long, slender end mill, slow feeds, and frequent chip evacuation. A 0.250″-wide, 1.0″-deep slot is a different machining problem than a 0.500″-wide, 1.0″-deep slot — and it costs three to five times more.
8. Add fillets to inside corners
Machined parts cannot have a perfectly sharp interior corner — the cutter is round. Specifying a sharp internal corner forces the shop to EDM it, which adds a process step. A 0.125″ internal fillet is free. A sharp internal corner is often $50.
9. Specify the surface finish you actually need
A 32 Ra finish is a finish operation. A 63 Ra finish is the as-machined finish off a sharp tool. A 16 Ra is grinding or polishing. If a face is internal and never seen, “as machined” is fine. Don’t blanket your drawing with a 32 Ra callout because it looks professional — it nearly doubles cycle time.
10. Plan secondary operations into the design
Anodizing, powder coat, heat treat, passivation — these all add lead time and cost, and they all change dimensions. If a tapped hole will be plated, design the thread depth to account for plating thickness. If a part will be heat-treated, leave grind stock on the critical surfaces. Catching this in the design phase saves a rework cycle.
11. Datum your drawing for the way the part will be inspected
A drawing whose datums match the part’s natural fixturing scheme is a drawing that inspects in 10 minutes. A drawing whose datums require custom inspection fixturing is a drawing that inspects in two hours — and you pay for those two hours on every part. If you are not comfortable with GD&T, our GD&T primer is the place to start.
12. Get a DFM review before you release
A 30-minute DFM review with someone who quotes parts for a living catches things no CAD-jockey will see. The cost of that review is recovered on the first prototype — and the savings compound across every production run.
The PartSnap DFM Process
We do paid DFM reviews and unpaid sanity checks. If you have a part that is coming back with quotes higher than you expected — or worse, parts that work in CAD and don’t work on the bench — send us the file. We will tell you which of the twelve decisions above are quietly burning your budget.
For a deeper dive on validating a design before manufacture, see our piece on when your design needs FEA. For help converting a drawing or sketch into a manufacturable model, our engineering services page has the full menu.
Want a DFM review on a part you’re about to release? Contact PartSnap with your CAD file and a one-paragraph description of what the part does. We’ll respond with the decisions worth reconsidering.
