Serving New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut

Aluminum Waterjet Cutting Long Island

Parts That Fit Right the First Time

When your aluminum parts need to be exact, waterjet cutting delivers clean edges, zero warping, and tolerances you can count on—whether you’re running one prototype or a thousand pieces.

Why Long Island Shops Choose Us

01

CNC Precision From CAD Files

Your designs go straight from CAD to our Flow Mach 500 waterjet system. No guesswork, no manual programming errors—just accurate cuts every time.

02

Zero Heat Distortion Guaranteed

Cold cutting process means your aluminum stays flat, maintains its temper, and keeps its structural properties intact. No warping, no weakened zones.

03

Local Long Island Service

Based in West Islip, we turn around jobs fast. You’re not waiting weeks for parts to ship from across the country or dealing with distant vendors.

40+

Years Of Experience

Waterjet Aluminum Cutting Long Island NY

Precision Cutting That Doesn't Compromise Your Material

Aluminum waterjet cutting in Long Island, NY uses high-pressure water and abrasive to slice through aluminum without generating heat. That matters because heat-based methods like laser or plasma can warp thin sheets, compromise material temper, and create zones where the aluminum loses strength. With waterjet cutting, you get clean, burr-free edges on everything from aircraft-grade 6061 to marine-grade 5052. The process handles intricate shapes, tight inside corners, and complex geometries that would be difficult or impossible with traditional cutting methods. Your parts come off the table ready for assembly or with minimal finishing required. Whether you need custom brackets for a construction project, precision components for aerospace applications, or decorative panels for architectural work, aluminum waterjet cutting delivers the accuracy and edge quality your project demands.

Why Long Island Shops Choose Us

01

Your parts arrive with smooth edges that often need zero deburring, saving hours of labor and letting you move straight to assembly.

02

Thin aluminum sheets stay perfectly flat because there’s no heat to warp or distort the material during cutting.

03

Complex designs with tight tolerances come out accurate to within .005″, so everything fits together correctly on the first try.

04

You’ll waste less material because waterjet’s narrow kerf and efficient nesting extract more parts from each sheet of aluminum.

05

Heat-treated or tempered aluminum keeps its properties intact since cold cutting doesn’t create heat-affected zones that weaken the metal.

06

Prototype to production happens seamlessly—the same process that cuts your first test piece cuts your thousandth production part with identical precision.

Precision Aluminum Cutting Long Island NY

From Your Design File to Finished Parts

The process starts with your CAD file or design concept. If you have detailed drawings ready, they go directly into our CNC waterjet system. If you’re still working through the design, we can help develop production-ready files that account for material thickness, kerf width, and any specific tolerances your application requires. Once programming is complete, your aluminum goes onto the cutting table. The waterjet head follows the programmed path with precision, mixing high-pressure water with garnet abrasive to cut through the material. You can watch the stream slice through thick aluminum plate as easily as thin sheet, maintaining the same level of accuracy regardless of material thickness. What you receive are parts with clean edges, accurate dimensions, and no heat damage. Depending on your application, parts may be ready to use immediately or require only light finishing. There’s no slag to chip off, no burned edges to grind down, and no warped sections to flatten. The parts that come off our waterjet table are the parts you designed, cut to the specifications you need.

Aluminum Plate Cutting Service Long Island

Why Aluminum and Waterjet Work So Well Together

Aluminum presents challenges for other cutting methods. Lasers struggle with aluminum’s reflective surface and can create rough edges or dross on thicker material. Plasma leaves heat-affected zones that compromise the metal’s strength. Traditional sawing is limited to straight cuts and leaves rough edges that need extensive finishing. Waterjet cutting handles aluminum exceptionally well across all grades and thicknesses. The 6061 aluminum commonly used in structural applications cuts clean and precise. Marine-grade 5052 that needs to resist corrosion comes off the waterjet table without any surface contamination. Even aerospace-grade 7075, which is harder and more challenging to machine, cuts smoothly when you dial in the right abrasive flow and pressure. The process is particularly valuable when you’re working with expensive aluminum stock. Material nesting lets you fit more parts onto each sheet, and the narrow kerf (.020″-.040″) means you’re not turning your costly aluminum into waste. For shops running tight margins, that material savings adds up fast.

Custom Aluminum Waterjet Cutting Long Island

What You Actually Get From Waterjet Cutting

Beyond just cutting aluminum to size, waterjet technology solves the problems that slow down your projects and drive up costs.

01

Design Review and File Prep

Send us your CAD files or sketches. We review dimensions, verify tolerances, and optimize the cutting path to minimize material waste and maximize accuracy.

03

Quality Check and Delivery

We verify dimensions and edge quality before your parts leave our shop. You get aluminum components that meet your tolerances and are ready for your next production step.

02

CNC Waterjet Cutting

Your aluminum goes onto our Flow Mach 500 system. High-pressure water mixed with abrasive cuts your parts exactly to specification, with no heat and no distortion.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the thickest aluminum you can cut with waterjet?
We can cut aluminum up to 6 inches thick, though most jobs fall in the range of thin sheet (.020″-.125″) to medium plate (1″-2″). The waterjet process handles thick aluminum better than laser cutting, which typically maxes out around 3/4″ for aluminum and often leaves rougher edges on thicker material. One advantage of waterjet for thick aluminum plate is that you don’t get the taper or beveled edges that can occur with other methods. The cut stays perpendicular through the full thickness of the material. That’s particularly important when you’re cutting parts that need to mate flush with other components or when edge quality affects the finished product’s appearance. For very thick aluminum—anything over 2 inches—cutting speed slows down, but the quality remains consistent. You’re not sacrificing edge finish or dimensional accuracy just because the material is thicker.
The cost comparison depends on your specific application. For thin aluminum sheet (under 1/4″), laser cutting is typically faster and may cost less per part if you’re running high volumes. But waterjet becomes more cost-effective when you factor in the full picture. Waterjet produces cleaner edges that often need zero secondary finishing, while laser-cut aluminum frequently requires deburring or edge cleanup. Waterjet doesn’t create heat-affected zones that can weaken the material or cause warping, eliminating the rework costs that come from distorted parts. The ability to nest parts efficiently on waterjet also reduces material waste, which matters when you’re cutting expensive aluminum alloys. For thicker aluminum (over 1/2″), waterjet is usually both faster and more economical than laser. And for certain aluminum grades that are highly reflective or prone to heat damage, waterjet may be your only viable option. Most shops find that waterjet’s higher quality and versatility offset any difference in per-hour operating costs, especially when you account for the total cost of getting usable finished parts.
We cut all aluminum alloys commonly used in manufacturing, fabrication, and construction. That includes the 1000 series pure aluminum, 3000 series aluminum-manganese alloys, 5000 series marine-grade aluminum, 6000 series structural aluminum like 6061-T6, and 7000 series aerospace-grade aluminum including 7075. Each alloy has slightly different properties—some are softer and more ductile, others are harder and stronger—but waterjet handles them all effectively. The main adjustment is in cutting speed and abrasive flow rate. Softer alloys like 1100 or 3003 cut quickly with less abrasive. Harder alloys like 7075 require slower traverse speeds and more abrasive to maintain edge quality, but the results are just as precise. Waterjet is particularly valuable for heat-treated or tempered aluminum because the cold cutting process doesn’t affect the material’s heat treatment. If you’re working with T6-tempered 6061 aluminum, for example, the waterjet won’t create softened zones around the cut edge the way a heat-based process would. Your aluminum maintains the properties you specified when you selected that particular alloy and temper.
For most aluminum waterjet cutting applications in Long Island, NY, we hold tolerances of ±.005″ (.125mm) on part dimensions. That’s tight enough for the majority of fabrication, construction, and manufacturing work. If your application requires tighter tolerances—precision aerospace components or parts that need to mate with extremely close fits—we can often achieve ±.003″ on smaller parts with optimal cutting parameters. Several factors influence tolerance: material thickness (thinner material generally allows tighter tolerances), part size (smaller parts are easier to hold to tight specs), and cutting speed (slower cutting with fine abrasive produces more precise edges). The kerf width on our waterjet system is typically .020″ to .040″, which is narrower than plasma cutting and allows for more precise nesting and tighter internal features. One thing to understand about waterjet tolerances: the process can produce a slight taper through thick material, where the top edge is slightly wider than the bottom edge. For most applications, this taper is negligible and doesn’t affect part function. For applications where it matters, we can adjust cutting parameters or use tilt-head technology to compensate and produce square edges through the full material thickness.
Turnaround time depends on your project’s complexity, the thickness of aluminum you’re cutting, and our current production schedule. For straightforward jobs—simple shapes cut from thin to medium aluminum sheet—we can often turn around parts in 2-3 business days from the time we receive your approved files. Rush service is available when you’re up against tight deadlines. More complex projects with intricate geometries, thick plate, or tight tolerances may take 5-7 business days to ensure we’re delivering the quality you need. High-volume production runs are scheduled based on total cutting time and material procurement. The actual cutting speed varies significantly based on material thickness and desired edge quality. Thin aluminum sheet might cut at 20-40 inches per minute for standard quality. Thick aluminum plate (2″+) might cut at 2-5 inches per minute to maintain clean edges and dimensional accuracy. When you request a quote, we provide an estimated lead time based on your specific requirements. If you’re working under a deadline, let us know upfront so we can prioritize your job accordingly.
We can work either way, depending on what makes sense for your project. If you have specific aluminum stock you need to use—maybe you’ve already purchased material, or you’re working with a particular alloy or finish that you source from a preferred supplier—you can provide the material and we’ll cut it to your specifications. Many of our Long Island customers prefer this approach when they’re working with specialty aluminum grades or when they have existing relationships with metal suppliers. Alternatively, we can help source aluminum for your project. This is often more convenient for customers who don’t regularly purchase metal stock or who are running smaller jobs where buying full sheets doesn’t make economic sense. We work with reputable aluminum suppliers and can typically source common grades like 6061, 5052, or 3003 in the thicknesses and sheet sizes your project requires. Material sourcing adds some lead time to your project since we need to order and receive the aluminum before cutting begins. But it simplifies your logistics—you send us a design file, and we deliver finished parts without you needing to coordinate material procurement, delivery, and cutting separately.