The question comes up constantly: do I need cutting fluid for this? The answer depends on the material, the drill, and what failure mode you're trying to avoid. Here's the actual breakdown.
Cutting fluid isn't just about cooling — it does four things simultaneously:
The failure mode cutting fluid prevents: built-up edge (BUE) and thermal softening. BUE happens when workpiece material welds to the cutting edge — common in aluminum, stainless, and titanium. Thermal softening happens when heat exceeds the bit's temper rating — common when running too fast in steel without lubrication.
What cutting fluid doesn't fix: bad geometry, wrong speed, or a dull bit. No amount of cutting oil saves a bit with unequal lip heights.
Use: light cutting oil, WD-40, or dry
Aluminum has a tendency to gall and stick to cutting edges. A light cutting oil or even WD-40 reduces this and helps chip evacuation. That said, many shops drill aluminum dry with good results — especially on short holes with frequent chip clearing.
Avoid heavy cutting oils in aluminum — they can cause chip packing rather than clearance.
Use: soluble oil (flood), sulfurized oil, or light cutting oil
Mild steel responds well to cutting fluid. Soluble oil (mixed 10:1 to 20:1 with water) is the standard in production environments. For drill press work, a squirt of sulfurized cutting oil or general-purpose cutting oil applied to the drill before entry does the job.
Dry drilling mild steel works for short holes and occasional use but accelerates edge wear compared to lubricated cuts.
Use: sulfurized cutting oil or heavy-duty soluble oil
Harder steels generate more heat and stress on the cutting edge. Don't skip fluid here. Sulfurized cutting oil is the standard — it forms extreme-pressure (EP) compounds at the cutting interface that reduce tool wear significantly.
Use: sulfurized cutting oil — mandatory
Stainless is the material where cutting fluid matters most. 304 and 316 work-harden under pressure, and any heat accelerates this. Sulfurized or chlorinated cutting oil (Tap Magic, Trefolex, similar) is the correct choice — these EP additives are specifically designed for work-hardening materials.
Apply before entry, maintain consistent feed pressure, never dwell in the hole.
Use: dry — no fluid
Cast iron is an exception. It's abrasive (the graphite inclusions act as an abrasive), but it doesn't weld or gall. Chips come out as powder rather than stringy cuts. Cutting fluid mixes with the graphite dust into an abrasive slurry that accelerates wear rather than reducing it.
Drill cast iron dry. Use correct speeds (50–80 SFM for HSS). Clear chips frequently.
Use: sulfurized or chlorinated cutting oil
Titanium generates intense localized heat and galls aggressively without lubrication. Use cutting oil. Keep speeds conservative (20–30 SFM for HSS). Use cobalt or carbide if you're doing production titanium.
Use: dry or compressed air
Most plastics are drilled dry. The exception is plastics that melt near the cutting edge (nylon, HDPE at high speed) — compressed air cooling works better than cutting fluid, which can contaminate the part.
You don't need to buy anything fancy for most job shop work:
| Situation | What Works |
|---|---|
| Mild steel, occasional use | Tap Magic (sulfurized) — available at Harbor Freight and Amazon |
| Aluminum | WD-40 in a pinch, or any light machine oil |
| Stainless | Tap Magic Pro-Tap or Relton Tapmatic (chlorinated/sulfurized) |
| Production use | Soluble oil concentrate + water (Mobilcut 102 or similar) — mix 12:1 |
| Everything (backup) | Dark sulfurized threading oil on the bench — works in a pinch on anything except cast iron |
Avoid motor oil as a substitute — it doesn't have the EP additives that matter in harder materials, and it smokes and smells terrible.
Proper cutting fluid extends drill life significantly — in stainless, the difference between dry and fluid is often 5–10x the holes per sharpen. In mild steel it's less dramatic but still real.
When bits coming back for resharpening show extreme edge wear concentrated at the outer corner of the cutting lip, that's usually a fluid or speed problem — not just use. The corner of the lip runs the fastest (highest peripheral velocity) and is the first casualty of heat-induced softening.
If you're burning through drills faster than seems reasonable for the work you're doing, check your fluid application first.
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