When customers ask us to machine plastic parts, one question comes up almost every week:
“Should we use Delrin or Nylon for CNC machining?"
On paper, both look similar.
In real factory production, however, the difference is huge.
Over the past 12 years running CNC machining for industrial buyers, we’ve processed 50,000+ Delrin and Nylon components for gears, bushings, sliders, wear plates, and automation parts.
We’ve seen:
Nylon warp after humidity exposure
Delrin hold ±0.01 mm tolerance for months
Wrong material choices cause 30–40% scrap rate
This guide shares real machining data, practical fixes, and buyer selection advice — not textbook theory.
| Property | Delrin (POM / Acetal) | Nylon (PA6 / PA66) |
|---|---|---|
| Dimensional stability | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐ |
| Moisture absorption | <0.3% | 2–7% |
| Machining precision | ±0.01–0.02 mm | ±0.03–0.05 mm |
| Surface finish | Smooth / glossy | Slightly fibrous |
| Wear resistance | High | Very high |
| Impact resistance | Medium | Excellent |
| Cost | Medium | Lower |
| Best for | Precision mechanical parts | Heavy-duty wear parts |
Quick rule we use in our factory:
Tight tolerance → Delrin
Shock load or abrasion → Nylon
Delrin (Polyoxymethylene / Acetal / POM) is one of the most dimensionally stable engineering plastics we machine.
When milling Delrin:
Chips break cleanly
No stringing
Minimal heat build-up
Tool wear very low
This means:
✔ faster feed rates
✔ better surface finish
✔ stable tolerance after machining
Material: 20 mm plate
Process: CNC milling
| Material | Flatness after 48h | Size change |
|---|---|---|
| Delrin | <0.01 mm | 0.02% |
| Nylon | 0.12 mm warp | 0.8% expansion |
Delrin clearly wins for precision mechanical assemblies.
Precision gears
Bushings
Linear slide blocks
Robot components
Semiconductor fixtures
Nylon (PA6 / PA66) is tougher and more impact resistant.
However, from a machining standpoint, it’s more “difficult".
Stringy chips wrapping tools
Heat deformation
Moisture swelling
Post-machining warping
In summer (humidity > 70%), we measured 0.15–0.25 mm growth on 200 mm parts within one week.
For tight tolerance jobs, this becomes a serious issue.
✔ heavy load
✔ sliding friction
✔ impact shock
✔ low cost required
Wear pads
Conveyor rollers
Heavy-duty bushings
Impact guards
Agricultural machinery parts
Follow this process we use with B2B customers:
±0.02 mm or tighter → Delrin
±0.05 mm → Either works
High humidity → Avoid Nylon
Outdoor use → Delrin safer
Continuous wear → Nylon
Precision motion → Delrin
Low cost priority → Nylon
Performance priority → Delrin
Part: Linear guide slider
Tolerance: ±0.015 mm
Originally used: Nylon
Problems:
Warping after assembly
Jamming on aluminum rail
18% rejection rate
Changed to Delrin (POM-C)
Results:
Tolerance stable
Friction reduced 22%
Scrap rate → 2%
Lifetime increased 1.8*
Customer saved ~$12,000/year in maintenance.
This is why we now default to Delrin for precision motion parts.
Use sharp carbide tools
High feed, medium speed
No coolant needed
Achieve mirror finish easily
Use air blast cooling
Lower speed to avoid melting
Rough + finish passes
Pre-dry material before machining
Drying Nylon alone reduced our warping issues by 40%.
| Factor | Delrin | Nylon |
|---|---|---|
| Raw material | $$ | $ |
| Machining time | Fast | Medium |
| Scrap rate | Low | Higher |
| Long-term stability | High | Medium |
Although Delrin costs ~15–25% more,
total cost per good part is often lower due to reduced scrap.
✅ Tight tolerance
✅ Precision assemblies
✅ Stable dimensions
✅ Smooth finish
✅ High impact strength
✅ Heavy wear resistance
✅ Budget solution
✅ Low precision requirement
Delrin is stiffer and more dimensionally stable, but Nylon has better impact resistance.
Delrin machines much cleaner with better tolerance.
Yes, 2–7%, which can cause swelling and deformation.
Nylon is cheaper in raw cost, but Delrin often reduces total machining waste.