Manfacturing Methods & Their Applications: A Full Guide

Manufacturing processes / methods
& Technical Drawing Differences

Manufacturing processes are controlled methods used to transform raw materials into finished components by altering shape, structure, or properties through mechanical, thermal, chemical, or energy-based means. These processes are selected based on geometry requirements, material behavior, production scale, and functional performance constraints.

Machining (CNC Milling / Turning)

Machining is a subtractive manufacturing process where material is removed from a solid workpiece using cutting tools to achieve the final geometry with high precision. Examples are:

  • CNC milling:
    Material is removed using rotating cutting tools along multiple axes to create prismatic and complex geometries
  • CNC turning:
    Workpiece rotates while a stationary cutting tool removes material, mainly for cylindrical parts
  • Drilling:
    Creates cylindrical holes using a rotating drill bit
  • Grinding (precision finishing):
    Uses abrasive wheels to achieve very tight tolerances and surface finishes
  • EDM (Electrical Discharge Machining):
    Removes material using electrical discharges, suitable for hard or complex materials
Image source: runsom.com

What the drawing looks like?

  • Clean orthographic views (front/top/side)
  • Dense dimensions everywhere
  • Datum symbols (A, B, C)
  • GD&T feature control frames

Typical visual signs of machining technical drawing:

  • Everything is dimension-driven
  • No “manufacturing process hints”
  • Very geometric and precise

Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see datums + GD&T everywhere ➡️ machining drawing

Sheet Metal Forming

Sheet metal forming is a manufacturing process where flat metal sheets are plastically deformed into final shapes using bending, stamping, or drawing, without material removal. Examples are:

  • Bending:
    Plastic deformation of sheet along a straight axis to create angles
  • Stamping:
    Pressing sheet metal into a die to create shapes or cut features
  • Deep drawing:
    Forming sheet into deep hollow shapes using tensile forces
  • Punching / blanking:
    Cutting or removing material using a punch and die system
  • Rolling (sheet production stage):
    Reducing thickness and producing sheet stock through rollers

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Image source: Metal Forming Visual Simulation Lab

What the drawing looks like

  • Flat, unfolded 2D shape
  • Bend lines clearly marked (dashed)
  • Bend angles annotated
  • Sometimes two views: flat + formed

Typical visual signs of sheet metal forming technical drawing:

  • Looks “unfolded” or “spread out”
  • Geometry looks unnatural in 2D (because it is flattened)
  • Bend table often present

Key recognition rule ➡️ If it looks like a flattened 3D object ➡️ sheet metal drawing

Injection Molding (Plastics)

Injection molding is a manufacturing process where molten plastic is injected into a mold cavity, cooled, and ejected as a solid part with repeatable geometry. Examples are:

  • Injection molding: molten polymer is injected into a closed mold cavity under pressure and solidified
  • Overmolding: a second material is molded over an existing part for grip or multi-material functionality
  • Insert molding: inserts (metal or other components) are placed into the mold and encapsulated by plastic
  • Multi-cavity molding: multiple identical parts are produced in a single mold cycle for high-volume production
Image source: RDMould.com

What the drawing looks like:

  • Clean plastic part outline
  • Draft angles marked on vertical walls
  • Wall thickness controlled
  • Parting line sometimes shown

Typical visual signs of injection molding technical drawing:

  • Slightly “industrial product design” look
  • Less GD&T everywhere
  • Focus on mold behavior, not machining precision

Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see draft angles + plastic housing features ➡️ injection molding

Casting (Sand / Die Casting)

Casting is a manufacturing process where molten material is poured into a mold cavity and solidifies into a near-net-shape component. Examples are:

  • Sand casting: molten metal is poured into a sand mold that is broken after solidification
  • Die casting: molten metal is injected under pressure into a reusable steel mold for high-volume production
  • Investment casting (lost wax): a wax pattern is coated with ceramic, melted out, and replaced with metal
  • Gravity casting: molten metal fills a mold under gravity without applied pressure
Image source: TrueCadd.com

What the drawing looks like:

  • Rough shape + final machined surfaces
  • Extra allowances marked
  • Internal cavities shown via cores
  • Less geometric precision on raw surfaces

Typical visual signs of casting technical drawing:

  • “Raw + finished hybrid” drawing
  • Machining symbols only on key faces
  • More complex internal geometry indicators

Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see machining + rough cast geometry combined ➡️ casting drawing

Welding and Fabrication

Welding is a manufacturing and assembly process where parts are permanently joined using heat, pressure, or both, often causing material fusion at the joint. Examples are:

  • MIG welding:
    Uses a continuously fed wire electrode and shielding gas for fast industrial welding
  • TIG welding:
    Uses a non-consumable tungsten electrode for high precision welds
  • Spot welding:
    Joins sheet metal by applying localized heat and pressure at points
  • Arc welding:
    General category of welding using electric arc heat for fusion
  • Riveting (often in hybrid fabrication):
    Mechanical fastening using deformable rivets instead of fusion
  • Bolted assembly fabrication:
    Structural assembly using threaded fasteners for disassembly capability
Image source: Apex-Draughting.co.uk

What the drawing looks like

  • Assembly views of multiple parts
  • Weld symbols everywhere (triangles, lines, notes)
  • Minimal part geometry detail
  • Focus on joints, not surfaces

Typical visual signs of welding technical drawing:

  • Symbol-heavy instead of dimension-heavy. Especially with welding symbols!
  • Looks like instructions for assembly, not machining
  • Often multiple parts in one drawing

Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see weld symbols dominating ➡️ fabrication drawing

Additive Manufacturing (3D Printing)

Additive manufacturing is a process where parts are built layer-by-layer from digital models using materials such as polymers, resins, or metals. Examples are:

  • FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling):
    Extrudes thermoplastic filament layer by layer to build a part
  • SLA (Stereolithography):
    Uses a laser to cure liquid resin layer by layer with high precision
  • SLS (Selective Laser Sintering):
    Fuses powder material using a laser to form solid structures
  • SLM / DMLS (metal 3D printing:
    Uses a laser to melt metal powder into fully dense metal parts
Image source: 3yourmind.com

What the drawing looks like

  • Orientation arrows (critical)
  • Support structure regions marked
  • Less traditional dimension density
  • Sometimes shows print setup, not just part

Typical visual signs of welding technical drawing:

  • Directionality matters (Z-axis emphasis)
  • Geometry looks “manufacturable in layers”
  • Supports sometimes explicitly drawn

Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see print direction + supports ➡️additive manufacturing drawing

Surface Treatment

Surface treatment is a manufacturing process category that modifies the surface properties of a component without significantly changing its bulk geometry, in order to improve performance such as wear resistance, corrosion resistance, hardness, or appearance.

  • Heat treatment:
    Controlled heating and cooling of metals to modify microstructure and mechanical properties (e.g., hardness, toughness)
  • Anodizing:
    Electrochemical process that forms a protective oxide layer on aluminum surfaces for corrosion resistance and aesthetics
  • Plating (electroplating / galvanizing):
    Deposition of a thin metallic layer (e.g., zinc, chrome) onto a substrate for protection or appearance
  • Painting / coating:
    Application of organic or polymer-based layers for corrosion protection and visual finishing
  • Powder coating:
    Electrostatically applied powder cured under heat to form a durable protective surface layer
  • Shot peening:
    Surface bombardment with small spherical media to induce compressive stresses and improve fatigue resistance
  • Polishing / surface finishing:
    Mechanical or chemical smoothing of surfaces to reduce roughness and improve appearance or friction behavior
Image source: Kemet.co.uk

What the drawing looks like

  • Minimal geometric change to part shape
  • Surface finish symbols (roughness Ra values)
  • Coating thickness specifications
  • Treatment notes applied globally or to selected surfaces
  • Sometimes heat treatment tables or process callouts

Typical visual signs of surface treatment technical drawing:

  • Geometry is unchanged compared to machining or forming drawings
  • Focus shifts to surface notes rather than shape definition
  • Often includes annotations like:
    • “Anodized 20 µm”
    • “Case hardened 58 HRC”
    • “Ra 1.6 μm”

Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see surface notes dominating instead of geometry ➡️ surface treatment drawing

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