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Hip Implants CNC Machining for Medical Industry

Hip implants are sophisticated orthopedic devices intended to take the place of damaged hip joints to help restore the mobility of patients. At Zintilon, we have expertise in CNC machining of components hip implants, using advanced multi-axis machining to create remarkable precision in dimensions, surface finish, and anatomical form for dependable podiatric function and quality of life over the years.
  • Machining for complex femoral stems and acetabular cups
  • Tight tolerances up to ±0.0002 in
  • Precision turning, milling & taper grinding
  • Support for rapid prototyping and full-scale production
  • ISO 13485-certified medical device manufacturing


Trusted by 15,000+ businesses

Why Medical Companies
Choose Zintilon

prductivity

Fast Delivery

A professional engineering team that can respond quickly to customer needs and provide one-stop services from design to production in a short period of time to ensure fast delivery.

10x

High Precision

We are equipped with automated equipment and sophisticated measuring tools to achieve high accuracy and consistency, ensuring that every part meets the most stringent quality standards.

world

ISO13485 Certified

As a ISO13485 certified precision manufacturer, our products and services have met the most stringent quality standards in the automotive industry.

From Prototyping to Mass Production

Zintilon offers CNC machining for hip implants and joint replacement devices for hospitals, orthopedic surgeons, and medical device manufacturers all over the world.

Prototype Hip Implants

Obtain hip implant components for prototype production that closely matches your intended design, allowing for anatomical fitting, taper dimension verification, and articulation verification before proceeding to production.

Key Points:

  • Rapid prototyping with high precision

  • Tight tolerances (±0.0002 in)

  • Test design, material, and biomechanical fit early

3 Axis CNC Machined Stainless Steel Passivation

EVT – Engineering Validation Test

Quickly iterate on hip implant prototypes to ensure they meet all biomechanical and wear resistance requirements. Identify potential issues early for a smoother transition to full-scale medical device manufacturing.

Key Points:

  • Confirm the functionality of the prototypes

  • Implement rapid design iterations

  • Assess the production readiness of the prototypes
Anodized Aluminum 1024x536

DVT – Design Validation Test

Prior to mass production, validate the design accuracy and functional performance of the joint and articulate the performance of the hip implants, using different materials and surface treatments to optimize the various joints, to allow for design precision and functional performance to be improved.

Key Points:

  • Confirm design integrity and biocompatibility

  • Evaluate a range of materials and bearing surfaces

  • Assess and evaluate performance for production readiness
design aluminium

PVT – Production Validation Test

Before the full production for hip implants, validate the feasibility of large-scale production and identify production challenges to be resolved to ensure production and operational efficiency, and consistency.

Key Points:

  • Evaluate large-scale production capabilities

  • Identify and address production challenges early

  • Monitor and evaluate part quality
Anodized Titanium Fastener

Mass Production

Quickly and accurately manufacture large quantities of implant grade hip components to ensure consistent and reliable clinical results, and on time delivery to healthcare providers and medical device distributors.

Key Points:

  • Production Consistency at Large Volumes

  • Medically Relevant Quality Equipment Use

  • Rapid Orientation with Reachable Quality Standards
production

Simplified Sourcing for
the Medical Industry

Our precision manufacturing capabilities are widely used in the medical industry. CNC machining, sheet metal fabrication and other technologies ensure high precision and heat resistance in the application of medical grade materials such as titanium alloy and PEEK.

Explore Other Medical Components

Browse our extensive selection of CNC machined medical parts, engineered to meet the highest quality and hygiene standards. From implant-grade components and instrument handles to housings for imaging systems and lab automation equipment, we deliver precision solutions for the evolving needs of the medical industry.

Medical Hip Implants Machining Capabilities

CNC Machining for the Medical Industry Hip Implants. Each modular femoral stem with a Morse taper connection, hemispherical acetabular shell with a ceramic femoral head, and ultra-smooth articulating surface incorporated for optimal load distribution, minimal wear, and long-term implant stability. Artisan mounts to femoral stems, acetabular domes, and ceramic heads with articulating surface of ultra-smooth articulation and hemispherical surfaces ceramic heads. Optimizing long-term stability and minimizing wear. Dimensional verification and wear testing were carried out for the precision CNC turning, multi-axis milling, taper grinding, and sphere grinding performed for the hip implant articulation and components interface. Machining the implant components for articulating and interface surfaces were performed using titanium alloys, cobalt-chromium-molybdenum, ceramic materials, medical stainless steel, and zebras. EBM.
milling

CNC Machining

sheet metal

Sheet Metal Fabrication

edm

Wire EDM

casting

Metal Casting

Aerospace
Materials & Finishes

Materials
We provide a wide range of materials, including metals, plastics, and composites.
Finishes
We offer superior surface finishes that enhance part durability and aesthetics for applications requiring smooth or textured surfaces.

Specialist Industries

you are welcome to emphasize it in the drawings or communicate with the sales.

Materials for Hip Implants Components

Uses CNC machine shop for a wide variety of materials for Machining Hip Implants for Medical Industry. 15+ medical grade metals and ceramics assist prototypes and precision components for orthopedic and FDA modernization standards. Consistency, Quality and Regulatory Compliance are combined in materials for Hip Implants components.
Aluminum Image

High machinability and ductility. Aluminum alloys have good strength-to-weight ratio, high thermal and electrical conductivity, low density and natural corrosion resistance.

Price
$ $ $
Lead Time
< 7 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.003 mm
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Stainless steel Image

Stainless steel alloys have high strength, ductility, wear and corrosion resistance. They can be easily welded, machined and polished. The hardness and the cost of stainless steel is higher than that of aluminum alloy.

Price
$ $ $
Lead Time
< 7 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.005 mm
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Steel Image

Steel is a strong, versatile, and durable alloy of iron and carbon. Steel is strong and durable. High tensile strength, corrosion resistance heat and fire resistance, easily molded and formed. Its applications range from construction materials and structural components to automotive and aerospace components.

Price
$ $ $ $ $
Lead Time
< 10 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.001 mm (routing)
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Titanium Image

Titanium is an advanced material with excellent corrosion resistance, biocompatibility, and strength-to-weight characteristics. This unique range of properties makes it an ideal choice for many of the engineering challenges faced by the medical, energy, chemical processing, and aerospace industries.

Price
$$$
Lead Time
< 10 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.005 mm
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Bronze Image

Highly resistant to seawater corrosion. The material’s mechanical properties are inferior to many other machinable metals, making it best for low-stress components produced by CNC machining.

Price
$ $ $ $ $
Lead Time
< 10 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.005 mm
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Brass Image

Brass is mechanically stronger and lower-friction metal properties make CNC machining brass ideal for mechanical applications that also require corrosion resistance such as those encountered in the marine industry.

Price
$$$
Lead Time
< 10 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.005mm
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Copper Image

Few metals have the electric conductivity that copper has when it comes to CNC milling materials. The material’s high corrosion resistance aids in preventing rust, and its thermal conductivity features facilitate CNC machining shaping.

Price
$$$
Lead Time
< 10 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.005 mm
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Zinc Image

Zinc is a slightly brittle metal at room temperature and has a shiny-greyish appearance when oxidation is removed.

Price
$ $ $ $ $
Lead Time
< 10 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.005 mm
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Iron Image

Iron is an indispensable metal in the industrial sector. Iron is alloyed with a small amount of carbon – steel, which is not easily demagnetized after magnetization and is an excellent hard magnetic material, as well as an important industrial material, and is also used as the main raw material for artificial magnetism.

Price
$ $ $ $ $
Lead Time
< 10 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.005 mm
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Magnesium Image

Due to the low mechanical strength of pure magnesium, magnesium alloys are mainly used. Magnesium alloy has low density but high strength and good rigidity. Good toughness and strong shock absorption. Low heat capacity, fast solidification speed, and good die-casting performance.

Price
$ $ $ $
Lead Time
< 7 days
Tolerances
Down to ±0.005 mm
Max part size
3000*2200*1100 mm
Min part size
2*2*2 mm
Let’s Build Something Great, Together

FAQs: Hip Implants for Medical Applications

Hip implants consist of sophisticated medical devices which are designed to replace damaged or diseased hip joints during a total hip arthroplasty.
Some of the most critical hip implant components are femoral stems that replace the femoral head and neck and fit into the medullary canal of the femur. These are available in both cemented and cementless designs with different fixation surfaces. There are modular femoral heads, ranging in size from 22 to 44 millimeters in diameter, that move against acetabular bearings made of metal, ceramic, or polyethylene. Other components are Morse taper connections, which are made to join femoral heads to stems and have standardized dimensions to enable secure attachment and load transfer, and acetabular cups or shells that replace the acetabulum and have outer hemispherical surfaces to allow bone fixation. There are also acetabular liners that provide the bearing surface for femoral head articulation in various configurations along with dual mobility systems that have mobile polyethylene liners. Other components are revision stems for failed primary implants, bipolar heads for hemiarthroplasty, and custom implants made from CT scans for complex anatomies.
Each of these elements must maintain precision within tight tolerances of ±0.010 millimeters at certain dimensions for proper fits within acetabular liners. The Morse tapers must also meet ISO 7206-4 guidelines for taper angles of 5 degrees 40 minutes ±6 minutes to ensure connection strengths exceed 4000 Newtons of pull-off force. Spherical surfaces of various femoral heads should maintain roundness tolerances of 0.005 millimeters to ensure minimal wear. Furthermore, the strength of the femoral stems must exceed the 5.3 kilonewtons cyclic loading pressure specified in ISO 7206-4 and 7206-6. Also, these devices should be permanently implanted for over 20 years while holding their biocompatibility, corrosion resistance, and mechanical strength must meet the specified standards with surface finish guidelines provided for either bone ingrowth or articulation on the bearing surfaces.

Every material has its own benefits for hip implants. For titanium alloys, and especially for Ti-6Al-4V ELI, the reasons are excellent biocompatibility and tissue integration for safety, documented for decades, superior direct bone cementless fixation and osseointegration (70% bone contact at 6 months), exceptional corrosion resistance, no concern for metal ions release with most patients, and closer bone elasticity (110 GPa versus 200 GPa for steel) which reduces stress shielding and bone stock preservation. Other benefits include sufficient strength for femoral stem applications, MRI compatibility for post-operative imaging, relative low density and thus implant weight, and presence of porous layers with hydroxyapatite. These have made titanium alloys the material of choice for cementless femoral stems and acetabular shells in contemporary hip arthroplasty.
Cobalt-chromium-molybdenum alloys demonstrate maximum abrasion resistance for articulating surfaces in metal-on-metal bearings and metal-on-polyethylene couplings which show volumetric wear rates of less than 1 mm³/year, enabling the fabrication of thin-walled acetabular shells and large-diameter femoral heads, excellent fatigue resistance for revision stems and highly loaded components, clinically proven performance in bearing applications for over 50 years, and the capability of achieving mirror polished surfaces of Ra < 0.01 microns reducing wear of polyethylene in metal-on-polyethylene bearings. Clinical applications show alumina (Al2O3) and zirconia (ZrO2) ceramics with volumetric wear rates 100 times lower than those of polyethylene than metal-on-polyethylene bearings, bioinert properties eliminating metal sensitivity, extreme hardness (HV > 1800) for surface integrity after millions of gait cycles, hydrophilic surfaces with Ra < 0.005 microns, clinically proven performance in ceramic-on-ceramic and ceramic-on-polyethylene bearings with < 15% 15 year survival and > 95% implant survival, and ceramic bearings with free surfaces which demonstrate respectively. Medical-grade stainless steel 316LVM is clinically suitable for cemented femoral stems in older patients with limited life expectancy, provides sufficient cost-effective performance, has sufficient strength and fatigue resistance, proven biocompatibility for medium to long-term implantation, and has 60 years of clinical history in cemented hip arthroplasty.

For hip implants, advanced precision machining technologies are utilized, for instance, multi-axis CNC milling for femoral stem bodies to create complex 3D geometries, which include metaphyseal flares, distal tapers, and anterior-posterior curves that conform to femoral anatomical shape, CNC turning for precision cylindric stem sections and acetabular shell outer diameters, and fomral head sphrical grinding to be within 0.005 mm and surface finish under 0.01 Ra microns for bearing surfaces. CNC taper grinding for abnormal Morse taper connections which adhere to ISO 7206-4 with a 5° 40' ± 6' taper angle and under 1.6 Ra microns surface finish. Internal acetabular liners for bearing surfaces sphered grinding, Wire EDM for thin-walled acetabular shells and revision stem intricate slot pattern, thread milling for screw holes in acetabular shells and junctions of modular stems, Porous coating through plasma spraying, sintered bead tech, and hydroxyapatite coating via plasma spray for osseointegration, and surface texturing using grit blasting for macro interlock with bone. CNC mirror finishing of bearing surfaces to cobalt-chrome heads and acetabular liners, HIP ceramic processing for pore elimination, Proof testing for structural integrity, Laser marking for implants with permanent id, and final inspection using CMM for critical dimensions including taper geometry, sphericity of head, stem geometry and acetabular shell dimensions.

Yes. We offer flexible manufacturing capabilities including:
Rapid prototyping for design validation
Low-volume production for specialized applications
High-volume production with consistent quality control
Full structural and dimensional verification at every stage

Yes, they absolutely are. A quality management system to ISO 13485 standards is certified and implemented for the medical device manufacturing of all components. This guarantees adherence to all FDA requirements for Class III medical devices which include premarket approval (PMA) for novel designs or 510(k) clearance for substantially equivalent devices, as well as to the European Medical Device Regulation (MDR) requirements for hip implants. Biocompatibility of materials implantable devices is tested per ISO 10993 for cytotoxicity, systemic toxicity, sensitization as well as implantation studies. Mechanical tests per the ISO 7206 series include fatigue testing of femoral stems, torque testing of Morse tapers, and wear testing of bearing couples. Other tests include dimensional checks for taper geometry and component dimensions per ISO 7206 and closure of traceability from raw material heat lot through final packaged sterile product to enable adverse event investigation. Adherence to the FDA Quality System Regulation (QSR) as well as Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) ensures patient safety for devices which are implanted in hundreds of thousands of patients worldwide every year.

We provide comprehensive finishing solutions tailored to aerospace requirements:
Anodizing (Type II and Type III)
Passivation for corrosion resistance
Precision polishing for aerodynamic surfaces
Custom protective coatings and thermal barriers

Lead times depend on how complicated the design is and on the regulations that have to be followed. For the standard components for older designs, the lead time is usually about 15-20 business days, which includes the time for machining, surface treatments, quality inspection, and packaging for sterilization. For custom implants made from CT scans, the lead time is about 4-5 weeks from approval of the scan to the packaged and sterilized device. For prototype runs, the lead time is usually 10-14 days, primarily determined by your surface treatment and the materials you have on hand. Many implants that are set up for high-volume manufacturing have significant lead time reductions. During the quotation process, we communicate all key elements in your manufacturing plan, which includes certifications for materials, ISO 7206 certified inspection reports for dimensions, mechanical testing when necessary, and all the regulatory materials for your PMA and 510(k) submissions.

Absolutely. Our engineers work with orthopedic surgeons to design custom hip implants for challenging cases such as severe dysplasia, fracture malunion, tumor reconstruction, and revision surgeries where there is significant bone loss. We transform DICOM medical images into custom 3D models, design femoral stems to fit the patient’s canal and assess bone quality, design acetabular components considering bone loss and previous implants, engineer stems with anteversion and offset for soft tissue balancing and leg length restoration, create modular junctions for intraoperative design, plan implants to encourage proximal bone remodeling, and design surgical planning models to illustrate where the implant should be positioned. This offers a solution for challenging cases like Crowe IV developmental dysplasia with severe high hip center reconstruction, major bone loss on the acetabulum requiring custom triflange components, proximal femoral deformity requiring custom curved stems, failed prior arthroplasty with poor bone stock, and tumor resection requiring custom structural allograft integration. This approach results in better direct hip biomechanical restoration, enhanced overall stability, and significant reduction in operative time which translates to improved patient satisfaction with personalized treatment and functional restoration. This approach is especially valuable in cases where standard implants fail because patients experience pain and loss of functional mobility.

Precision CNC machining results in advantageous performance in multiple areas. A modern couple demonstrates optimal bearing function with fluid film lubrication, volumentric wear rates under 1 cubic millimeter a year, and radial clearance maintained for a properly fitting acetabular liner with a femoral head of diameter ±0.010 millimeter. Morse taper geometry with ISO 7206-4 specification standard and pull-off forces of 4000 Newtowns guarantees a head-stem connection to a modular junction while avoiding fretting corrosion at a junction, and junctions that generates metal debris. Sphericity of femoral heads to within 0.005 millimeter standard guarantees there will be no point contact and ensures stress distribution at contact pressures less than the yield strength of the material and protected against, no surface damage, wear. Preserving bearing surface with a Ra finish of 0.01 microns and metal heads with a 0.005 microns finish on ceramics controls the friction coef friction, and wear to extend bearing life to at least 20 years. Acetabular shell geometry and screw hole placement predict screw trajectory and screw fixation for bone quality within screw trajectory for supplemental fixation and low quality bone.
When the stem geometry conforms to specifications, including neck-shaft angle of ±1 degree and offsets of ±0.5mm, hip biomechanics and soft tissue tension allow for 5mm leg length equality. With bone ingrowth and biological fixation of 20 MPa shear strength accomplished within 6 months, customized bone coatings of 100 to 400 micron pore sizes with 30 to 50 percent porosity provide adequate fixation. The design and material properties provide adequate stem stiffness to prevent stress shielding and bone loss. The bone mineral density surrounding the implant is within 10 percent of contralateral hip. Biocompatible materials with appropriate surface finish prevent adverse tissue reactions allowing for permanent implantation. Dimensional consistency allows predictability in the surgical technique and in achieving reproducible component positioning. The defect-free quality of the manufacturing is what prevents catastrophic failure.
ISO 7206-4 specifies the testing standards for the assessment of fatigue strength for different models. With the properly constructed and manufactured testing models with fatigue strength exceeding 10 million loading cycles at 2300 Newtons, the hip implants precision machining results with clinical foundations for successful outcomes including pain relief after hip surgery, patients’ Harris Hip Scores moving from 40 preoperative to over 90 postoperative, functional restoration after the surgery including activities of daily living and recreational activities, with implant survival rate exceeding 95% at 10 years and 90% at 20 years for modern cementless implants, having advanced bearing couples, low complication rates with dislocation below 2%, infection below 1%, and aseptic loosening below 1% per year, minimal wear with linear wear rates below 0.05 at year for cross-linked polyethylene and ceramic bearings, and long-term patient satisfaction with pain free mobility, and improved quality of life for patients for the 20 to 40 years for the post operatively lifetime.
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