Isoline milling is a good technique for finishing surfaces.
An example of isoline toolpaths on a single surface:
Isoline milling uses the isoline curves of a surface to mill the surface. These curves can be in the row direction or column direction.
Advantages
Disadvantages
Restrictions of isoline milling
Isoline milling works on a surface-by-surface basis. This can result in numerous retracts.
The orientation of the surfaces matters. Toolpaths are generated for surfaces whose normals point up. Surfaces are 'auto-flipped' where possible, but for vertical and some other cases, you must specify the machining side. Select the surface in the list and click Switch machining side. Isoline milling may mill on the wrong side of the surface or if certain flags are set, it may skip the surface.