Grinding vs. Milling in CEREC MC X/XL: A Material Science Guide to Tool Selection
In digital chairside and laboratory workflows, selecting the correct processing strategy within the CEREC software is as critical as the restoration design itself. While operators often use the terms "milling" and "grinding" interchangeably, the CEREC MC X and MC XL units treat them as two fundamentally distinct mechanical processes.
Mismated processing modes and tool selections do not merely cause software errors; they directly lead to micro-fractures along restoration margins (chipping) and premature wear on the spindle motors. This guide breaks down the material science and force dynamics behind grinding and milling modes.

1. Wet Grinding: Micro-Abrasion for Brittle Materials
When processing lithium disilicate (e.g., IPS e.max CAD), feldspathic ceramics (e.g., VITABLOCS), or leucite-reinforced glass-ceramics, the CEREC system strictly mandates Grinding mode.
-
Tool Profile: This mode utilizes diamond-coated instruments, specifically pairing a stepped diamond bur (e.g., Step Bur 12S or Step Bur 20) on the left spindle with a pointed cylindrical diamond bur (e.g., Cylinder Pointed Bur 12S or Cylinder Pointed Bur 20) on the right.
-
Mechanical Principle: Glass-ceramics possess high hardness but low fracture toughness, making them highly brittle. Diamond burs do not possess a geometric cutting edge; instead, they are embedded with thousands of microscopic industrial diamond grits. The grinding process relies on these grits passing over the material at high speeds ($>30,000\text{ RPM}$), creating localized micro-cracks that cause the ceramic to flake away at a microscopic level.
-
Margin Protection: Attempting to cut a brittle glass-ceramic with a bladed carbide tool would introduce severe shear stress. This stress would propagate uncontrolled cracks along the material's crystalline boundaries, resulting in severe chipping before the block even reaches the crystallization furnace.
2. Wet/Dry Milling: Geometric Wedge Cutting for Ductile Materials
For polymers, composite resins (PMMA), and pre-sintered zirconia blocks, the system transitions to Milling mode.
-
Tool Profile: This mode requires solid tungsten carbide burs featuring defined, sharp geometric cutting edges (flutes), such as the Shaper 25 RZ, Shaper 25, and Finisher 10.
-
Mechanical Principle: Polymers and pre-sintered zirconia exhibit ductile behavior and structural plasticity. Tungsten carbide flutes act as mechanical wedges, physically shearing off continuous ribbons or fine powders of material through a defined chip-formation process.
-
Fluid Dynamics of Shaper 25 RZ: The Shaper 25 RZ is the primary tool for wet milling strategies, distinguished by a square engraving on its shank. Its helical flute geometry is specifically engineered to optimize fluid dynamics under water-cooling. It forces resin slurry or wet zirconia paste out of the cutting track, preventing material adhesion to the cutting edge that would otherwise cause thermal friction and tool binding.
3. Hardware Constraints: Spindle Overload & Serial Number Restrictions
Operators upgrading to modern software versions (CEREC 4.4x / inLab 15 or higher) frequently wonder why "Combination 4" (carbide wet milling) remains grayed out or unavailable for certain material blocks. This is a rigid hardware limitation built into the firmware to protect the milling unit.
Carbide milling of resilient materials exerts a much higher radial force on the motor spindle compared to the axial forces of diamond grinding. To accommodate this stress, Sirona upgraded the internal spindle bearings and drive assemblies on later-generation machines. Combination 4 (Wet Milling) is exclusively supported on units bearing the following serial numbers or later:
-
inLab MC XL: Serial No. 129001 and higher
-
CEREC MC XL: Serial No. 129001 and higher
-
CEREC MC X: Serial No. 231001 and higher
Running carbide milling strategies on a machine below these serial thresholds would rapidly destabilize the spindle assembly, leading to premature motor failure.




Leave a comment
All blog comments are checked prior to publishing