Waterjetting is a high-precision cutting process that uses an ultra-high-pressure stream of water—often combined with abrasive media—to cleanly cut metal, plastics, rubber, composites, and other industrial materials without heat distortion. Unlike laser or plasma cutting, waterjet machining produces smooth, accurate edges with no heat-affected zone, making it ideal for custom components, replacement parts, prototypes, and intricate shapes. This technology allows manufacturers to produce tight-tolerance parts quickly and consistently, delivering exceptional accuracy for industries that rely on high-quality, waterjetted components.
Waterjet cutting offers unmatched versatility and precision, making it one of the most effective methods for producing custom components and high-quality machined parts. Because waterjetting uses cold cutting technology, it eliminates heat-affected zones, distortion, and material warping—preserving the integrity of metals, plastics, rubber, composites, and more. The process delivers exceptionally clean edges, tight tolerances, and the ability to create complex shapes with minimal finishing required. Waterjetting also reduces waste, supports rapid turnaround times, and enables consistent accuracy across short-run and high-volume part production. For businesses that need reliable, repeatable, and high-precision parts, waterjet machining provides a superior solution.
Our waterjet system is engineered to cut a wide range of materials with exceptional precision, making it ideal for custom components, replacement parts, and complex shapes. Because waterjetting uses a cold-cutting process, it maintains each material’s structural integrity and delivers clean, accurate edges without burning, melting, or warping. We routinely cut:
Metals: Steel, stainless steel, aluminum, copper, brass, titanium, Inconel, and other alloys
Plastics & Polymers: HDPE, UHMW, PVC, acrylic, polycarbonate, Delrin (acetal), nylon
Rubber & Elastomers: Neoprene, EPDM, nitrile, gasket materials, industrial rubber sheets
Composites: Carbon fiber, fiberglass, G10/FR4, phenolic laminates
Stone & Ceramics: Tile, slate, granite, marble (for industrial or structural components)
Foam & Soft Materials: EVA, insulation foam, packaging foam, specialty soft materials