Two common options for cutting large numbers of identical, flat parts are die cutting and waterjet cutting. Each method has its advantages and disadvantages, and applications where one or the other makes the most sense in terms of speed, cost per part, and other factors. Let’s begin with a definition of each technology.
Die Cutting: Die cutting is a manufacturing process using specialized and custom tools (dies) along with some type of force to press the die through the stock material. Die cutting is used predominantly with soft materials like paper, plastic and foam, while there are some much less common uses for processing very thin sheet metal. While the term die cutting is used to refer to both flatbed as well as rotary applications, this article is generally considering flatbed application as it generally has more cross-over with waterjet cutting. In these applications, the material being cut is positioned on a flat work surface, and the dies create the shapes, much like a cookie cutter makes “parts” from flat sheets of dough. Die cutting is “tooled” in that it requires a unique and custom die to be created and installed for each different part.
Water Jet Cutting: Water jet cutting, is a manufacturing process utilizing an ultra-high-pressure jet of water to perform cutting of an extremely wide variety of materials. For the soft materials like paper, foam & rubber mentioned above, generally a water-only system is used. It is important to note that waterjet systems can also use an abrasive media, which then enables processing a nearly limitless array of hard and brittle materials, with metals, stone and glass as some very common examples.
The stock material is placed on a cutting table, and the ultra-high-pressure jet stream cuts or erodes the material along the programmed path to produce the desired profile. Water jet cutting systems use computer numeric control (CNC) software to manage the cutting process. Importantly, water jets are “tool-less” in that there are no unique and part-specific cutting heads or dies that need to be changed for each new part or part revision, but rather a CNC program file is created or revised in minutes to produce a new or revised part geometry.
Water jet and die cutting serve different but complementary roles in manufacturing parts. Die cutting may be a better choice for extreme high-volume production levels, but has significant limitations, costs and challenges related to the tooling that it requires.
Water jet cutting offers unmatched flexibility and versatility. As a tool-less, CAD/CNC-driven cutting system, part changeovers are fast and setup costs are minimal. With custom configured systems with many cutting heads available, the production volumes achievable for waterjet systems are significantly higher than those who’ve only worked with single headed systems would expect, but the primary drawback of waterjet systems is in the extreme high volume production cases.
Choosing between water jet and die cutting ultimately comes down to your priorities: whether you value versatility and precision across a broad range of materials, or the speed and economy of long-run production. If you’re curious to understand how water jet cutting might perform for your application, Jet Edge can help you take the next step. Call us at 1-800-538-3343 (1-763-497-8700 internationally) or complete our online form today. Our skilled and experienced application engineers are here to help.
Since 1984, Jet Edge has been designing and manufacturing Ultra-High-Pressure Water jet technology that doesn't back down. Our systems are used around the world in a broad range of industries from the world's leading airlines, to automotive, aerospace and industrial manufacturers, and machine job shops.
To learn more about the Jet Edge difference, our water jet motion systems, pumps and much more, click the button "Download Brochure" to get it now!