Cutting Guides

Cutting HDPE and Acrylic on a Hobby CNC: Fast, Clean, and Full of Gotchas

Keywords: cutting acrylic CNC router, HDPE hobby CNC, CNC plastic cutting feeds speeds

Last updated: March 2026 · 5 min read

Slug: /guides/cutting-hdpe-acrylic-hobby-cnc/

Read time: 7 min

Keywords: cutting acrylic CNC router, HDPE hobby CNC, CNC plastic cutting feeds speeds

Plastics Are Your Friend (Until They're Not)

Plastics produce some of the cleanest, most satisfying cuts on a hobby CNC. No tearout drama like wood, no built-up edge like aluminum. When settings are right, the cut is beautiful.

When they're wrong, the plastic melts, cracks, or shatters in your face. So let's talk about getting it right.

HDPE: The Forgiving Plastic

HDPE (high-density polyethylene) is a work with:

  • Gummy, doesn't shatter
  • Machines like butter
  • Forgives slightly wrong speeds better than acrylic
  • Melts if you go too slow (which is the trap)

The key: Fast feed, sharp single-flute or 2-flute O-flute bit, decent spindle speed.

Recommended settings:

  • RPM: 18,000
  • Feed: 2,000–3,500 mm/min (fast)
  • DOC: 2–5mm

HDPE is one of the few materials where you want to feed fast. Slow feeds = heat buildup = melting. This is backward from hardwood, which rewards slow, careful feeds.

The counterintuitive truth: If your HDPE cuts are melting and gumming up, speed up. Don't slow down.

Acrylic (PMMA): Beautiful But Fragile

Acrylic cuts cleanly and finishes glossy. It's tempting. It's also prone to:

  • Cracking from thermal stress (too slow = heat = cracks)
  • Melting at cut edges (chips re-weld)
  • Chatter marks if runout is high

The O-flute bit is the standard for acrylic. Single flute, maximum chip clearance, designed for this exact problem.

Recommended settings:

  • RPM: 18,000
  • Feed: 1,500–2,500 mm/min
  • DOC: 1–3mm

Acrylic is more sensitive than HDPE to setup quality. A rigid, low-runout spindle makes a huge difference.

The Melting Problem and How to Prevent It

Acrylic melts when:

  1. Chips are re-cut instead of evacuated
  2. Heat builds up from rubbing
  3. Spindle speed is too low for feed rate (wrong chip load)

Solution: Use O-flute bits (single flute), fast feed, and compressed air.

Compressed air from a blower or compressor helps flush chips away, preventing re-cutting. The difference is dramatic in acrylic. If you're not using compressed air on acrylic, you're making it harder than it needs to be.

Polycarbonate (PC): Tougher Than Acrylic

Polycarbonate is impact-resistant and tougher than acrylic. Machines similar but slower:

  • RPM: 16,000–18,000
  • Feed: 1,200–2,000 mm/min
  • DOC: 1–2mm

Polycarbonate is more forgiving than acrylic on speed/feed errors, but the finish won't be quite as glossy.

PVC: Don't Do This

PVC generates chlorine gas fumes when cut at the high temperatures CNC produces. Only cut with serious ventilation and respiratory protection, or don't cut it.

Seriously, just don't. The toxic gas exposure isn't worth it.

UHMW-PE (Ultra-High Molecular Weight Polyethylene)

Similar to HDPE but even lower friction and more chemical resistance. Used for gaskets, bearing surfaces, low-friction parts.

Machines similarly to HDPE:

  • RPM: 18,000
  • Feed: 2,000–3,000 mm/min
  • DOC: 2–4mm

Very forgiving material. If HDPE is easy, UHMW is trivial.

The Burr Problem on HDPE

HDPE edges fuzz slightly after cutting (similar to MDF). The difference is that plastic burrs are sharp and plastic-y, not wood fuzz.

Solution 1: Deburring tool or file, takes 30 seconds per edge

Solution 2: Heat gun (briefly, low temp) to melt burrs smooth—actually works, feels weird

Solution 3: Belt sander on low speed—effective but strips the gloss

Most hobbyists just file the edges. It's the most controllable approach.

Protective Film: Leave It On

Acrylic and most sheet plastics come with protective plastic film on both sides. Keep it on while cutting. It prevents:

  • Scratches from chips
  • Dust embedding in the surface
  • Tool marks from accidental rubbing

Remove it after the cut is finished and edges are cleaned up.

Chip Evacuation Is Critical

Plastics that re-cut their own chips = melted mess. Evacuation is do-or-die:

  1. O-flute bits — Maximum chip space, designed for this
  2. Compressed air — Blows chips away during cut
  3. Fast feed — Keeps chips moving out of the cut zone
  4. Shallow DOC — Less volume of chips to manage

Combine all four and acrylic becomes easy. Skip any of them and you'll have frustration.

Feeds and Speeds by Plastic Type

Material Bit Type RPM Feed (mm/min) DOC (mm) Notes
HDPE 2-flute O-flute 18,000 2,500–3,500 3–5 Fast feed is key
HDPE Single-flute 18,000 2,000–3,000 2–4 Slightly slower than 2-flute
Acrylic Single-flute O-flute 18,000 1,500–2,500 1–3 Compressed air essential
Acrylic 2-flute 18,000 1,500–2,000 1–2 Slower than single-flute
Polycarbonate Single-flute 16,000 1,200–2,000 1–2 More forgiving than acrylic
UHMW-PE 2-flute O-flute 18,000 2,000–3,000 2–4 Very easy, forgiving

Edge Finish Quality

Clean edge (glossy):

  • Sharp O-flute bit
  • Fast feed
  • Compressed air
  • Correct spindle speed
  • Low spindle runout

Hazy/frosted edge:

  • Dull bit
  • Too slow feed (melting)
  • No chip evacuation
  • Wrong RPM

A frosted edge can be polished back to glossy with fine sandpaper or acrylic polish, but prevention beats repair.

Sourcing Sheet Plastic

  • Local acrylic suppliers: Higher cost but immediate availability
  • Amazon/eBay: Good for 1/4" or thicker acrylic in small pieces
  • Tap Plastics or similar regional chains: Bulk pricing, various thickness
  • AliExpress/Etsy: Cheap but slow delivery

For first projects, buy from a local supplier even if pricey. Learning on trial-and-error acrylic is expensive; buy good material and focus on technique.

What We'd Buy

For plastic work on a hobby CNC:

  1. O-flute single-flute 1/4" bit ($15–25): The workhorse for acrylic
  2. O-flute 2-flute 1/4" ($15–25): For HDPE where speed matters more
  3. Clear cast acrylic sheet, 1/4" ($30–50): Buy a few pieces for learning
  4. HDPE sheet, 1/2" ($20–30): Tougher, good for functional parts
  5. Compressed air system or blower ($40–100): Essential for acrylic edge quality

Shop This Guide

Item Source Notes
O-Flute Single-Flute Upcut Bit Amazon → Standard for acrylic work
Acrylic Sheet 1/4" Clear Amazon → Cast acrylic, not extruded
HDPE Sheet 1/2" Amazon → Very forgiving plastic
Compressed Air Kit Amazon → Improves acrylic edge quality dramatically