Is roughing done with EDM? I thought it was used for getting straight to finished surface
-There's two basic types of EDM (electrical discharge machine): Wire (WEDM) and conventional (RAM). For both the level of finish depends upon:
1) Tolerance required
2) Level/number of details
The following are generalized descriptions and not definitive or complete
Conventional EDM uses an electrode the size/shape of the blind cavity with any details machined into the electrode itself. The electrode can/will erode as it burns away the metal so sharp edges/details my become more rounded. Dimensions may change as the electrode burns and a taper may exist at the end of the burn cycle. If tight tolerances/details are required a second (or more) electrode may be required for a "finish" burn cycle. Sometimes details are selectively burned in with multiple "trodes" that are sectional to make things easier.
Wire EDM (WEDM) uses a spool of traveling wire instead of a hunk of graphite (or other materials) as an electrode. A small hole is created in the work, the wire is threaded through, and the burning process begins. WEDM is far more prevalent than conventional now but it must have the ability to go all the way through the work. All blind cavities are the realm of conventional EDM. Wire is capable of great accuracy and precision but even wire usually takes a rough and a finish pass to create that accuracy.
-Any of those ads showing nice looking parts from the WEDM are NOT how they look when they leave the machine stage. There's always a yellowish or brown (burned) surface to remove with the bead blaster and a small "***" to remove/blend with the surface grinder. Both types have a place and purpose.