How Laser and Waterjet Work
Fibre Laser Cutting
Modern fibre laser cutters use a high-power laser beam (typically 2kW–30kW) focused to a spot size of 0.1–0.3mm to melt and vaporise metal. An assist gas (nitrogen for clean cuts on stainless/aluminium; oxygen for mild steel to accelerate combustion) blows the molten material out of the kerf. The process is fast — very fast — and produces excellent edge quality on thin to medium metals. The heat input, however, is significant and creates a heat-affected zone (HAZ) around every cut edge.
Abrasive Waterjet Cutting
Waterjet cutting pressurises water to 3,800–6,200 bar (55,000–90,000 psi) and accelerates it through a small orifice (0.25–0.35mm nozzle) at Mach 3. Abrasive garnet (80–120 mesh) is drawn into the stream, creating a slurry that mechanically erodes almost any material. There is no heat input — the process is entirely mechanical erosion. The water absorbs the kinetic energy, keeping the part essentially at ambient temperature throughout the cut.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Key Characteristics
Key Characteristics
Thickness Limits by Material
Thickness is the most common reason to switch from laser to waterjet. Laser cutting efficiency drops sharply above certain thicknesses — the beam diverges, cut quality degrades, and cutting speed becomes so slow that the cost advantage disappears. Here are practical limits:
| Material | Laser (Practical Limit) | Waterjet (Practical Limit) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mild Steel | 25mm (high-power laser) | 150–200mm | Above 20mm, laser quality drops |
| Stainless Steel 304 | 20mm | 150–200mm | Laser edge can discolour above 15mm |
| Aluminium 5052/6061 | 15–20mm | 150–200mm | Al is reflective; thin Al at risk of back-reflection |
| Aluminium 7075 | 12–15mm | 100mm | Higher strength = harder to cut either way |
| Copper | 5–8mm (difficult) | 80–100mm | Very reflective; laser requires special settings |
| Brass | 5–6mm | 80mm | Reflective; laser is challenging |
| Titanium | 6–10mm | 80–100mm | Laser creates significant HAZ in Ti |
| CFRP / G10 / FR4 | Not recommended | 25–50mm | Laser burns/delaminate; waterjet is only option |
| Stone / Glass | Not recommended | 100–200mm | Waterjet only for brittle non-metals |
| Tool Steel (hardened) | Not practical | 50–80mm | Hardened steel is laser-resistant; waterjet handles it |
Rule of thumb: For mild steel over 16mm, stainless over 12mm, or aluminium over 15mm — ask for waterjet pricing. The edge quality difference alone often justifies the extra cost, and for very thick sections, waterjet may actually be faster than a slow, high-power laser pass.
The Heat-Affected Zone Problem
The heat-affected zone (HAZ) is the region around a laser cut edge where the material's microstructure has been altered by heat. It's visible on steel as a blue/brown heat-tint band, typically 0.1–2mm wide depending on material thickness, laser power, and cutting speed. The HAZ is not just cosmetic — it causes real engineering problems:
Hardness Changes
In mild steel, rapid heating and cooling within the HAZ creates martensite — a hard, brittle microstructure. HAZ hardness can reach 400–500 HV even in otherwise soft mild steel. If your part will be welded, bent, or machined near the laser cut edge, this hardened zone can cause cracking, poor weld fusion, or tool wear.
Residual Stress
Thermal gradients during laser cutting create residual tensile stress at the cut surface and compressive stress slightly deeper. In thin parts, this can cause warping (especially in 1–2mm stainless). In fatigue-loaded parts, residual tensile stress at a notch (like a laser-cut hole) reduces fatigue life significantly.
Effect on Material Properties
Heat-treated alloys lose their temper in the HAZ. A 6061-T6 aluminium part laser-cut through a critical cross-section will have a softened band (returned to approximately T4 condition) at the cut edge. For structural calculations assuming uniform T6 properties, this is a problem. Waterjet cutting eliminates this entirely — 6061-T6 cut by waterjet retains full T6 mechanical properties to the cut edge.
When HAZ Matters Most
- Heat-treated alloys (6061-T6, 7075-T6, hardened steel, D2, H13)
- Parts that will be welded near the cut edge
- Fatigue-loaded parts (aerospace, automotive, cycling components)
- Thin stainless parts that warp from residual stress
- Parts where the cut surface will be left exposed (no subsequent machining)
- Medical and food-contact components where surface chemistry must be unaltered
Common misconception: "Nitrogen laser cutting doesn't cause a HAZ." Nitrogen assist gas reduces oxidation and eliminates the brown heat tint — but the HAZ is still there. The laser still melts the metal; nitrogen just prevents it from burning. If HAZ is a concern, specify waterjet.
Materials Where Waterjet Wins
Reflective Metals: Copper, Brass, and High-Silicon Aluminium
Copper and brass are notorious for reflecting laser energy back up the beam path — potentially damaging the laser head and optics. Modern fibre lasers with back-reflection protection can cut copper up to 5–6mm, but it requires careful parameter management and the process is significantly slower than cutting mild steel. For copper busbars, conductors, or brass fittings over 4–5mm, waterjet is the standard process.
Composites: CFRP, GFRP, G10, FR4, Kevlar
Laser cutting of CFRP (carbon fibre reinforced polymer) is a disaster: the resin burns, the carbon fibres are left protruding, and delamination between plies occurs in the HAZ. The cut edge requires extensive post-processing. Waterjet cuts CFRP cleanly, though the abrasive can cause minor fibre pull-out at the exit side. G10, FR4 (PCB substrate), and Kevlar composites all fall in the same category — waterjet only.
Hardened Tool Steel and Wear Plate
Laser cutting of hardened D2, H13, AR400, or Hardox wear plate is practical for thin sections but becomes challenging above 8–10mm. The existing hardness resists melting, requiring very high power and slow speed, and the HAZ risk of cracking during rapid thermal cycling is real. Waterjet cuts hardened tool steel at any thickness without thermal effects or cracking risk.
Titanium and Specialty Alloys
Titanium is laser-cuttable, but it's reactive at elevated temperature — the cut edge picks up oxygen and nitrogen from the atmosphere, creating a hard, brittle alpha-case layer. For titanium parts that will be used in service without machining the cut surface, waterjet is strongly preferred. Inconel, Hastelloy, and other nickel superalloys also develop problematic HAZs under laser cutting and are better suited to waterjet.
Stone, Ceramics, and Glass
Non-metallic hard materials — granite, marble, ceramic tile, tempered glass, and sintered ceramics — are exclusively waterjet territory. They either can't absorb laser energy efficiently or fracture from thermal shock. Waterjet cuts them smoothly with tight tolerances.
When Laser Cutting Wins
To be balanced: laser cutting is the right process for the vast majority of sheet metal work. Here's where it clearly outperforms waterjet:
- Thin to medium steel (1–16mm): Laser is 3–10× faster than waterjet and produces a cleaner, narrower kerf
- High-volume production: Laser cutting machines run faster cycle times, reducing per-part cost
- Complex geometry in thin sheet: Very fine features, slots, and holes are better resolved on laser
- Aluminium sheet under 12mm: Modern fibre lasers handle aluminium well with nitrogen assist; waterjet is slower and more expensive
- Turnaround priority: Most laser shops can turn around a job in 24–72 hours; waterjet schedules are often longer
- Cost sensitivity: Laser is universally cheaper per meter of cut on standard-thickness sheet metal
Kerf Width and Dimensional Tolerance
Both processes remove material in the kerf — the gap created by the cutting action. Kerf width matters for nesting efficiency, for parts with features close to the edge, and for calculating correct hole diameters versus slot widths.
| Parameter | Fibre Laser | Abrasive Waterjet |
|---|---|---|
| Typical Kerf Width | 0.1–0.5mm (material/thickness dependent) | 0.8–1.5mm |
| Positional Accuracy | ±0.05–0.1mm | ±0.1–0.25mm |
| Repeatability | ±0.05mm | ±0.1mm |
| Edge Perpendicularity | Very good on thin; degrades on thick | Slight taper on thick (1–3°) |
| Min Hole Diameter | ~T (approximately equal to thickness) | ~2× T for good quality |
| Min Slot Width | ~1mm | ~2mm |
Waterjet Taper
Waterjet cuts develop a slight taper (the "V-shape") on thick sections because the jet loses energy as it travels deeper. On 10mm aluminium, taper is negligible (0.1–0.5°). On 80mm steel, it can be 2–3°. High-end waterjet machines compensate with a tilting cutting head that cuts a perfectly vertical edge. If perpendicularity on thick sections is critical, specify "dynamic head / taper compensation" in your order.
Edge Finish and Surface Quality
Laser Cut Edge
A nitrogen-cut laser edge on stainless or aluminium is bright and clean — often requiring no further treatment for appearance-critical applications. The Ra (average roughness) is typically 1.6–6.3 µm depending on thickness and material. Oxygen-cut mild steel has a characteristic brown/blue oxidised surface that requires deburring and may need blasting before painting.
Waterjet Cut Edge
Waterjet edges have a slightly frosted, matte texture from the abrasive action. Ra is typically 3.2–6.3 µm for quality cuts and up to 12.5 µm if cut at higher speed. There is no heat tint, no oxidation, and no HAZ. The edge is structurally the same as the parent metal. For aluminium, the waterjet edge can be anodized directly without the HAZ anodizing inconsistency you'd get from a laser cut edge.
Cost Comparison
Waterjet cutting typically costs 2–5× more per meter of cut than laser cutting for standard materials and thicknesses. The gap narrows for thick sections (where laser is slow) and for exotic materials (where waterjet is the only option). Here's a rough comparison for India pricing as of 2026:
| Job Type | Laser (approx.) | Waterjet (approx.) | Waterjet Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2mm mild steel sheet, simple part | Rs. 80–150/part | Rs. 300–500/part | 3–4× |
| 10mm mild steel bracket | Rs. 350–600/part | Rs. 700–1200/part | 2× |
| 25mm steel plate, complex shape | Rs. 1500–3000/part | Rs. 2000–4000/part | 1.3–1.5× |
| 50mm aluminium block | Not practical | Rs. 3000–6000/part | — |
| 5mm CFRP laminate | Not recommended | Rs. 1500–3000/part | — |
| 10mm copper busbar | Marginal (Rs. 800+) | Rs. 1200–2000/part | Lower risk |
These are ballpark figures — actual pricing depends on part geometry, quantity, material grade, and the specific fab shop. FYORD can quote both processes for your parts if you're unsure which is the right choice.
The Decision Guide
Use this table to make the call quickly:
- Material thickness exceeds laser limit
- Material is reflective (copper, brass)
- Material is a composite (CFRP, G10)
- Material is hardened / heat-treated
- HAZ will affect weld quality
- Part is fatigue-critical (aerospace, automotive)
- Cut edges will be anodized (aluminium)
- Material is titanium or nickel superalloy
- Non-metallic material (stone, glass)
- Part will warp from thermal stress
- Mild steel, stainless, or Al under 15mm
- High volume — cost per part matters
- Fast turnaround required
- Fine features, narrow slots (<2mm)
- Tight budget on standard sheet metal
- Parts will be subsequently machined
- Galvanised or coated thin sheet
- Complex sheet metal nesting
- Same-day or next-day delivery needed
The hybrid approach: For thick parts where the perimeter outline is cut by waterjet, but internal features (holes, slots) are subsequently drilled or machined, you often get the best result. Waterjet for the blank; CNC for precision features. Share your drawings with FYORD and we can recommend the optimal split.
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