Engineering Guide

Is Powder Metallurgy Right for Your Part?

August 18, 2024 · 4 min read

Precision metal parts manufactured via powder metallurgy

PM can slash your per-unit costs — or it can be an expensive mistake. The difference comes down to two criteria. If your part meets both, PM is likely your best option. If it doesn't, look elsewhere.

Criterion 1: Geometric Simplicity

PM parts are shaped by molds. That makes the process ideal for components with strong symmetry, simple profiles, and minimal structural layers. Classic PM parts include:

  • Gears and sprockets
  • Oil pump rotors
  • Valve guides and bushings
  • Structural brackets and spacers
  • Lock mechanisms and cam profiles

If your part has complex multi-level geometry, undercuts, or features that require extensive secondary machining, PM's cost advantage erodes quickly.

Criterion 2: Volume

PM tooling represents a real upfront investment. The economics only work at scale:

Larger parts: MOQ typically 5,000+ pieces

Smaller parts: MOQ typically 10,000+ pieces

At these volumes, PM starts to make a lot of sense: fast production cycles, good part-to-part consistency, near-zero material waste, and lower energy consumption than machining. Powder metallurgy production floor

The Quick Decision Matrix

Simple geometry + High volume → PM is likely optimal

⚠️ Simple geometry + Low volume → Run the cost math — may or may not work

⚠️ Complex geometry + High volume → Consider die casting or investment casting

Complex geometry + Low volume → CNC machining is probably better

Not Sure? Send Us the Drawing.

Our engineers evaluate PM feasibility for free — including process comparison against CNC, casting, and forging. Get a free assessment →