Surface Finish Standards Explained: Ra, RMS, N-Grades & What Manufacturers Need to Know
Jun 25, 2026
Surface finish describes the texture and quality of a manufactured surface, typically quantified by surface roughness parameters such as Ra (arithmetic average) and RMS (root mean square). The most widely used international standard is ISO 4287/4288, while ASME Y14.36 governs U.S. drawing callouts. The older ISO 1302 N-grade system (N1–N12) is still seen on legacy drawings, but modern drawings specify Ra in micrometres (µm) or microinches (µin).
1. Why Surface Finish Standards Matter in Manufacturing
If you have ever received a purchase order that says "mirror finish" on one page and "Ra 0.8 µm" on the next, you already know the problem: surface finish language is inconsistent across industries, regions, and decades of legacy drawings.
For metal fin...