EAZ Model Post-Processing Service

Surface Finishing for Better Appearance, Protection, and Functional Performance

Surface finishing is often what turns a machined or molded part into a product-ready part. The right finish can improve corrosion resistance, wear behavior, texture, color consistency, conductivity, and overall visual quality — depending on what the application actually needs.

Anodizing Electroplating Painting & Coating Sandblasting Brushing & Polishing

Finishing is not decoration only — it affects both performance and perceived quality

For many products, the finish directly influences corrosion resistance, hardness, adhesion, conductivity, texture, and how professional the part looks in the customer's hand. Choosing the wrong finish can make a good part feel cheap. Choosing the right one can raise both function and value.

Common Surface Finishing Options

Finish selection should depend on material type, appearance target, working environment, and any functional requirements such as corrosion resistance, insulation, or conductivity.

Process Type Typical Benefits Common Material Fit
Anodizing / Hard Anodizing Improves corrosion resistance, surface protection, and can support color finishes Aluminum alloys, some titanium applications
Electroplating (nickel, chrome, zinc, etc.) Improves wear resistance, appearance, and in some cases electrical performance Steel, copper, brass, some aluminum-related parts
Painting / Powder Coating / Oil Coating Adds color, surface protection, and stronger visual consistency Metal parts and selected plastics
Sandblasting / Brushing Creates matte or textured surfaces and improves tactile appearance Stainless steel, aluminum alloy, selected machined parts
Passivation Enhances corrosion resistance on stainless steel components Stainless steel
Heat Treatment / Surface Hardening Supports hardness, wear behavior, and durability in demanding use cases Steel and selected engineering metal parts
Why It Matters

Surface finishing should be chosen by purpose, not by habit

A lot of factories treat finishing like a final cosmetic step. That is too shallow. In reality, finishing should be selected based on the actual goal of the part and the environment it will face.

  • Functional needs: such as conductivity, corrosion resistance, insulation, hardness, or wear behavior
  • Aesthetic needs: such as color consistency, matte texture, brushed metal look, gloss level, or premium feel
  • Process coordination: some finishes help later coating adhesion, protect the base material, or improve final assembly perception

Best for Functional Improvement

When the part must survive corrosion, friction, or repeated use, finishing should prioritize performance first.

  • Anodizing for aluminum protection and color stability
  • Electroplating when wear resistance or conductivity matters
  • Passivation for stainless steel corrosion behavior
  • Hardening when service life is a bigger concern than appearance alone

Best for Appearance and Brand Perception

For consumer-facing products, the finish often decides whether the part feels premium, technical, or low-end.

  • Powder coating or painting for strong color control
  • Brushing and polishing for cleaner metal aesthetics
  • Sandblasting for matte texture and softer visual reflection
  • Combination finishes for both protection and better presentation