Trim edge cracking can begin during sawing, routing, punching, die cutting, or later handling. Brittle transparent materials show the defect clearly, but stressed ABS, HIPS, and other sheets can also split at a cut edge.
Dull tools, poor support, excessive impact, heat buildup, incorrect clearance, and cutting before the part is dimensionally stable are common causes. Forming at an unsuitable temperature may leave residual stress that the trim operation merely exposes.
Diagnose forming versus cutting
A crack pattern that follows every cutting tool points toward process or tooling. Cracks that begin at the same formed corner suggest molded-in stress or local thinning. A stress-relieved or differently formed sample can help separate the sources.
The cutting method must suit the polymer, thickness, and geometry. Tools should be sharp, the part supported close to the cut, and chips removed without overheating. Final edge quality should be evaluated after conditioning because microcracks can grow after trimming.
