Extrusion dies are your single largest tooling expense. A single complex die can cost $5,000 or more. Your die supplier promises it will last 800 tons of production, but you’re lucky to get 500 tons before it needs to be reworked or replaced. This adds hundreds of thousands of dollars to your annual operating costs – and no one seems to know why.
Most manufacturers blame poor die steel quality or inexperienced die makers when dies fail prematurely. Some even switch to more expensive premium steels, only to see minimal improvement in die life. While these factors can play a role, they are rarely the root cause.
The real reason most dies die too soon is uneven polishing and excessive vibration.
Manual die polishing is inherently inconsistent. Even the most skilled polishers will leave some areas of the die bearing surface rougher than others. This causes uneven metal flow during extrusion, creating hot spots and localized wear that destroy the die prematurely.

Traditional
Double-Head Pullers make this problem even worse. The abrupt impact during handover sends shockwaves through the extrusion and into the die. This repeated mechanical stress causes micro-cracks in the die surface, which grow over time and lead to catastrophic failure.
You may have tried implementing stricter polishing standards or training your polishers harder. But human error is unavoidable. And no amount of training can eliminate the fundamental limitations of manual polishing.
The solution is to automate the polishing process and eliminate vibration from your extrusion line. Tongzheng’s PG Series
Abrasive Flow Machining System polishes the entire die bearing surface uniformly and consistently, removing only microscopic imperfections without damaging the underlying material. This extends die life by 30-50% compared to manual polishing.
Our
Three-Head Double-Rail Puller delivers vibration-free continuous traction, eliminating the impact shocks that damage dies. One of our customers reduced their annual die replacement costs by $220,000 after implementing these two solutions.
If your dies are wearing out too quickly, stop blaming your die supplier. The problem is not in the steel – it’s in how you polish your dies and how you pull your extrusions.
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