
60,000
PSI.
±0.003" Tolerance.
Garnet-laced water slices through two-inch titanium like a scalpel through paper. Parts most CNC mills quote excuses on — we cut by Thursday.
Cut Anything.
Hold Everything.
Abrasive waterjet cuts from 1/16" to 10" thick — no heat-affected zones, no slag, no secondary finishing required on most materials.
| MATERIAL | GRADE / SPEC | THICKNESS RANGE | TOLERANCE | EDGE FINISH | HEAT ZONE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
STEEL | A36 / 4140 / 304SS | 10.0" | ±0.003" | Satin smooth | NONE |
ALUMINUM | 6061-T6 / 7075 / 5052 | 8.0" | ±0.003" | Satin smooth | NONE |
TITANIUM | Ti-6Al-4V / CP Grade 2 | 4.0" | ±0.003" | Satin smooth | NONE |
GLASS | Float / Tempered / Laminated | 2.0" | ±0.005" | Clean edge | NONE |
STONE | Granite / Marble / Corten | 6.0" | ±0.005" | No finishing req. | NONE |
Waterjet vs.
Everything Else.
Laser cuts thin metal fast. Plasma cuts thick steel cheap. Waterjet cuts everything with zero heat distortion and tolerances that hold on titanium, stone, and glass equally.
Data based on industry-standard capability ranges. Waterjet tolerance at 60,000 PSI with taper compensation engaged. Laser data for fiber laser on mild steel ≤12mm. Plasma data for HF plasma on mild steel.
Ready to Run.
On Your Schedule.
6×12 cutting table. Two-shift operation. Most jobs ship within the lead times below — complex aerospace parts included.
Field Reports.
Real Parts. Real Specs.
“Submitted a DXF for a Ti-6Al-4V turbine bracket at 11 p.m. Had a quote by 7 a.m. Parts in my hands Wednesday. Held ±0.003" on every feature. Our CMM didn't find a single out-of-tolerance dimension across 12 pieces.”

“We needed 6061 suspension uprights with compound geometry — the kind of profile that makes laser shops hang up the phone. Kerf nested 8 per sheet, held every radius, and had them ready before our build weekend. No deburring required.”

“The corten panels bolt straight onto the facade. No grinding, no secondary finishing, no callbacks from the install crew. The kerf edge is clean enough that it's actually part of the design language. Architects love it.”
